Thanks Scott,
yes I got this working too, but only if I use a classpath variable for the
linked folder which I've set up in the prefs first. True, it's cumbersome to
do this for every project but once it's set, it's nice to have the
F3-functionality!
-sascha
----- Original Message -----
From: "Scott Whittaker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, July 08, 2005 7:45 AM
Subject: [osflash] RE: Linked classpath in Eclipse
Hi Sascha, David,
In you project create a virtual folder for your linked classpath
(New-->Folder-->Advanced-->Link to file system, browse for your folder,
give it a name to appear in your project).
That will link the folder to your project. To add it to yor project's
classpath first right-click your project
folder-->properties-->ActionScript2 Project and type in the name you gave
your linked folder and click the Add button.
You can now compile as if you had added that folder with -cp and you get
syntax highlighting and F3 finding. The only annoying thing is that you
have to do this for every project you create, but if this could be
automated with an Ant task like David's example that would be sweet!
- Scott W.
Hi Sascha,
i noticed that too as i mentioned in my first post. but simply adding a
new linked resource (like 'myCommonClasses') also doesnt work for me.
of course we could place all com/net/org in the core classes but thats not
what i/we want :)
we could only pass additional params to mtasc like multiple -cp's and
achieve a solution that way, >which is kinda easier ihmo for this task. or
am i totally missing the point ;) ?
Regards
David
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