Multiple Workstations Path issue - Can I Write/Read to TFS?





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I have two applications. The first application writes a text file,
the second one picks it up and parses it...



but I develop on multiple workstations and the file paths to the Source Control folders are different, so I cannot use absolute paths.



Is it possible to write to the root of the Source Control? Both solutions are in TFS. I tried using $ as the root, but something was incorrect because my application interpreted my input as "C:{localpath}$". I assume my applications need the permissions to the server, but how would this work, where do I start?



(One answer would be to just combine the first .sln with the second one, but my question could be relevant in other situations, so I will ask it anyway)










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    If you have two applications that are dependent on one another, keep them in the same workspace and use relative paths.

    – Daniel Mann
    Nov 16 '18 at 18:49











  • Ok I got it, I was thinking about it incorrectly before

    – AncientElevator9
    Nov 19 '18 at 12:42


















0















I have two applications. The first application writes a text file,
the second one picks it up and parses it...



but I develop on multiple workstations and the file paths to the Source Control folders are different, so I cannot use absolute paths.



Is it possible to write to the root of the Source Control? Both solutions are in TFS. I tried using $ as the root, but something was incorrect because my application interpreted my input as "C:{localpath}$". I assume my applications need the permissions to the server, but how would this work, where do I start?



(One answer would be to just combine the first .sln with the second one, but my question could be relevant in other situations, so I will ask it anyway)










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    If you have two applications that are dependent on one another, keep them in the same workspace and use relative paths.

    – Daniel Mann
    Nov 16 '18 at 18:49











  • Ok I got it, I was thinking about it incorrectly before

    – AncientElevator9
    Nov 19 '18 at 12:42














0












0








0








I have two applications. The first application writes a text file,
the second one picks it up and parses it...



but I develop on multiple workstations and the file paths to the Source Control folders are different, so I cannot use absolute paths.



Is it possible to write to the root of the Source Control? Both solutions are in TFS. I tried using $ as the root, but something was incorrect because my application interpreted my input as "C:{localpath}$". I assume my applications need the permissions to the server, but how would this work, where do I start?



(One answer would be to just combine the first .sln with the second one, but my question could be relevant in other situations, so I will ask it anyway)










share|improve this question














I have two applications. The first application writes a text file,
the second one picks it up and parses it...



but I develop on multiple workstations and the file paths to the Source Control folders are different, so I cannot use absolute paths.



Is it possible to write to the root of the Source Control? Both solutions are in TFS. I tried using $ as the root, but something was incorrect because my application interpreted my input as "C:{localpath}$". I assume my applications need the permissions to the server, but how would this work, where do I start?



(One answer would be to just combine the first .sln with the second one, but my question could be relevant in other situations, so I will ask it anyway)







c# tfs path






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











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asked Nov 16 '18 at 15:47









AncientElevator9AncientElevator9

12212




12212








  • 1





    If you have two applications that are dependent on one another, keep them in the same workspace and use relative paths.

    – Daniel Mann
    Nov 16 '18 at 18:49











  • Ok I got it, I was thinking about it incorrectly before

    – AncientElevator9
    Nov 19 '18 at 12:42














  • 1





    If you have two applications that are dependent on one another, keep them in the same workspace and use relative paths.

    – Daniel Mann
    Nov 16 '18 at 18:49











  • Ok I got it, I was thinking about it incorrectly before

    – AncientElevator9
    Nov 19 '18 at 12:42








1




1





If you have two applications that are dependent on one another, keep them in the same workspace and use relative paths.

– Daniel Mann
Nov 16 '18 at 18:49





If you have two applications that are dependent on one another, keep them in the same workspace and use relative paths.

– Daniel Mann
Nov 16 '18 at 18:49













Ok I got it, I was thinking about it incorrectly before

– AncientElevator9
Nov 19 '18 at 12:42





Ok I got it, I was thinking about it incorrectly before

– AncientElevator9
Nov 19 '18 at 12:42












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