Thanks for the tips, Richard and Angel.

It does not sound like an ideal situation. Perhaps I should take at
Maven and what the Maven plugins for Eclipse and IDEA can do.

- Dave



On Sat, Nov 7, 2009 at 8:39 AM, Angel Vera <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Dave,
>
> Welcome to the eclipse world :). I managed to configured roller in different
> two ways. But I don't develop roller actively so this two ways might not be
> the best.
>
> 1. Slow but with the correct structure
> Trying to mimic how I think roller runs at runtime, I started creating java
> projects and web projects as required.  In order to figure the right
> dependencies, I had to go through the build.xml file and find exactly what
> it was doing. I also tried to match the names of the projects to the actual
> jars. I might have a copy of this workspace on one of my computers at home.
> I did this based on Roller 4.0 RC9 I think
>
> 2. Fast but mainly for debugging, can't compile.
> This was recomended by someone on the newsgroups. Create a web project and
> import the source, then add all jars required (including the compiled code
> for roller) to the java build dependency.
>
> Let us know about your experience.
>
> On Sat, Nov 7, 2009 at 12:22 AM, Dave <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I'm using Eclipse at work now and considering using it for Roller dev too.
>>
>> Anybody ever get Roller configured as an Eclipse "Dynamic Web Project"
>> and if so, any pointers to share?
>>
>> - Dave
>>
>

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