Computer Science, asked by paras11221, 10 months ago

Subversion (svn) is a distributed version control system.
a. True
b. False

Answers

Answered by muskan4622
1

Answer:

hey mate...

.False

SVN is a centralized version control system .

It's different from distributed version control system.

thanks...✌️✌️

and mark as brainlist ...

Answered by hotelcalifornia
0

Subversion (svn) is a distributed version control system b. False.

Why is it so?

  • SVN is an incorporated rendition control framework.
  • It's unique about dispersed frameworks, similar to Git.
  • Disruption (SVN) is one of the most notable brought-together rendition control frameworks.
  • In Subversion or SVN, you are looking at a solitary variant of the store.
  • With SVN, your information is put away on a focal server.

What brought together the variant control framework?

  • Unified variant control frameworks depend on the possibility that there is a solitary "focal" duplicate of your task someplace (most likely on a server), and software engineers will "commit" their progressions to this focal duplicate.
  • "Committing" a change implies to keep the adjustment of the focal framework.

#SPJ2

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