Also you're not always in your IDE. For instance I recently tried to change something experimentally in the AS code base, just using my text editor (no, it was not vi ;). Then CS can really be in the way for compilation/tests. So I think it makes most sense to have it in the "verify" phase.
2013/4/18 Hardy Ferentschik <ha...@hibernate.org> > > On 18 Jan 2013, at 5:27 PM, Sanne Grinovero <sa...@hibernate.org> wrote: > > > On 18 April 2013 16:13, Gunnar Morling <gun...@hibernate.org> wrote: > >> Yeah, I was just about to suggest that :) > > > > Good idea, but isn't it true that if your IDE is correctly setup it > doesn't matter? > > True, but sometimes you might want to ignore the rules. > > > I'm not sure about IDEA, but Eclipse detects the checkstyle rules and > > shows violations right away. > > Not sure, I don't have any check style plugin enabled in Idea. And again, > it > is a question of IDE vs build. Wether and how you configure your IDE to > conform to the coding standard is one thing and where and how you check > the standard as part of the build is another. > > --Hardy > > _______________________________________________ hibernate-dev mailing list hibernate-dev@lists.jboss.org https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/hibernate-dev