Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
And it groups the resources nicely together that belong together. It is kind of a wicket threesome ;-) Martijn On 11/11/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I think it is worth it because it consolidates what usually is three different editor tabs into one, so i can access more things quickly. i have a 21 screen and i can only see about 6-7 tabs at a time, this plugin would double/tripple that real-estate. and it eliminates all the scrolling you have to do in the package manager, or clicking that link button all the time. -Igor On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on11/11/2005 3:16 AM :# well it sounds resonable. but it also sounds like a lot of research and learning, unfortunately i dont think i have time for all that. i barely have enough time to work on wicket and wicket-spring integration stuff. so if someone wants to pick this up they are more then welcome to :) the code is all there in wicket-stuff/wicketeer project. -IgorUnderstandable. My schedule for this end of year is very tight, so I will most probably not be ableto do it. However, if somebody is starting to work on it, probable I will be able to offer some hints. Not planning to sound bad: but I was wondering if the effort is really worth it: 1 click instead of3 (and maybe some less navigation)../alex--.w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 2:50 AM :# well what i would really like is this. whenever i click on a java file that extends from markupcontainer, i would like the java editor to open. On the bottom i would like to have tabs, one for each wicket resource So if i have MyPanel.java MyPanel.html MyPanel.properties and i double clik MyPanel.java, i would have three tabs on the bottom for each one of those files, each tab would embed the proper eclipse editor. This would really boost productivity because you wouldnt have to go looking for the templates and property files and switching is really easy. But i dont even know where to start looking to do something like this. The renaming stuff wasnt that difficult to find and seemed intuitive, but something like this might be over my head for the amount of time i have to spend on it. -Igor I see. I am not a Wicket user (or at least not yet - just been around to figure out if the framework is gonna help me). I guess the editor you are speaking about is quite new. Why? Because usually the multi-tab editors are presenting the same information/file but in different formats, while here you are speaking about 3 different sources. However it looks like the steps to be followed are the following: 1/ look in the WTP to see how this multi-tab editors are done 2/ take the XHTML editor from there 3/ create a component/or whatever we call it that presents together the Eclipse Java editor, an XHTML editor and the Eclipse properties editor. This definitely should work. My approach would be to look what interfaces a source editor must provide and than create a simple implementation based on pure SWT/JFace with multiple tabs. I remember a discussion on the Wicket ML where the markup (HTML file) wasn't named exactly as the Java source. I am not sure if this is supported or not. In case it is supported, than the things may become more complex, as you should go down to the Eclipse Java source parser and extract the exact piece of information to retrieve the HTML name. what do you think about these? do they make any sense to you? ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:44 AM :# unfortunately i havent seen any open source plugins that embed a java editor inside a multitabbed editor yet, so its been hard to get my expiration :) unfortunately i just dont have the time to become an eclipse guru to work on this. maybe you can help out. -Igor Let me know what are your future thoughts on the plugin and I will evaluate if I am really able to provide help :-). ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. ps: if you want to reach me offline pls use the_mindstorm[at]evolva[dot]ro. thanksOn 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:01 AM :# Juergen,I get the same warning. Im not really sure why its there. What im thinkingis just copying and pasting that class into the plugin's source. As i said,this is my first time fiddling with eclipse. The easiest way i found to deploy it is to let eclipse generate an ant fileby right clicking on the MANIFEST.MF and going to pde tools/build ant fileand then doing the build using ant. When its done you get the jar file youcan drop into the plugins
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
#: Martijn Dashorst changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 11:52 AM :# And it groups the resources nicely together that belong together. It is kind of a wicket threesome ;-) Martijn Still, it is not clear to me if the scenario I have described in one of my previous mails is possible (to use an HTML markup resource with a different name than the Java source), cause this is almost completely changing the dates of the problem. ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/11/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I think it is worth it because it consolidates what usually is three different editor tabs into one, so i can access more things quickly. i have a 21 screen and i can only see about 6-7 tabs at a time, this plugin would double/tripple that real-estate. and it eliminates all the scrolling you have to do in the package manager, or clicking that link button all the time. -Igor On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 3:16 AM :# well it sounds resonable. but it also sounds like a lot of research and learning, unfortunately i dont think i have time for all that. i barely have enough time to work on wicket and wicket-spring integration stuff. so if someone wants to pick this up they are more then welcome to :) the code is all there in wicket-stuff/wicketeer project. -Igor Understandable. My schedule for this end of year is very tight, so I will most probably not be able to do it. However, if somebody is starting to work on it, probable I will be able to offer some hints. Not planning to sound bad: but I was wondering if the effort is really worth it: 1 click instead of 3 (and maybe some less navigation). ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 2:50 AM :# well what i would really like is this. whenever i click on a java file that extends from markupcontainer, i would like the java editor to open. On the bottom i would like to have tabs, one for each wicket resource So if i have MyPanel.java MyPanel.html MyPanel.properties and i double clik MyPanel.java, i would have three tabs on the bottom for each one of those files, each tab would embed the proper eclipse editor. This would really boost productivity because you wouldnt have to go looking for the templates and property files and switching is really easy. But i dont even know where to start looking to do something like this. The renaming stuff wasnt that difficult to find and seemed intuitive, but something like this might be over my head for the amount of time i have to spend on it. -Igor I see. I am not a Wicket user (or at least not yet - just been around to figure out if the framework is gonna help me). I guess the editor you are speaking about is quite new. Why? Because usually the multi-tab editors are presenting the same information/file but in different formats, while here you are speaking about 3 different sources. However it looks like the steps to be followed are the following: 1/ look in the WTP to see how this multi-tab editors are done 2/ take the XHTML editor from there 3/ create a component/or whatever we call it that presents together the Eclipse Java editor, an XHTML editor and the Eclipse properties editor. This definitely should work. My approach would be to look what interfaces a source editor must provide and than create a simple implementation based on pure SWT/JFace with multiple tabs. I remember a discussion on the Wicket ML where the markup (HTML file) wasn't named exactly as the Java source. I am not sure if this is supported or not. In case it is supported, than the things may become more complex, as you should go down to the Eclipse Java source parser and extract the exact piece of information to retrieve the HTML name. what do you think about these? do they make any sense to you? ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:44 AM :# unfortunately i havent seen any open source plugins that embed a java editor inside a multitabbed editor yet, so its been hard to get my expiration :) unfortunately i just dont have the time to become an eclipse guru to work on this. maybe you can help out. -Igor Let me know what are your future thoughts on the plugin and I will evaluate if I am really able to provide help :-). ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. ps: if you want to reach me offline pls use the_mindstorm[at]evolva[dot]ro. thanks On 11/10/05, Alexandru
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
its only software, since when is something not possible? -Igor On 11/11/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Martijn Dashorst changed the world a bit at a time by saying on11/11/2005 11:52 AM :# And it groups the resources nicely together that belong together. It is kind of a wicket threesome ;-) MartijnStill, it is not clear to me if the scenario I have described in one of my previous mails ispossible (to use an HTML markup resource with a different name than the Java source), cause this is almost completely changing the dates of the problem../alex--.w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/11/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I think it is worth it because it consolidates what usually is three different editor tabs into one, so i can access more things quickly. i have a 21 screen and i can only see about 6-7 tabs at a time, this plugin would double/tripple that real-estate. and it eliminates all the scrolling you have to do in the package manager, or clicking that link button all the time. -Igor On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 3:16 AM :# well it sounds resonable. but it also sounds like a lot of research and learning, unfortunately i dont think i have time for all that. i barely have enough time to work on wicket and wicket-spring integration stuff. so if someone wants to pick this up they are more then welcome to :) the code is all there in wicket-stuff/wicketeer project. -Igor Understandable. My schedule for this end of year is very tight, so I will most probably not be able to do it. However, if somebody is starting to work on it, probable I will be able to offer some hints. Not planning to sound bad: but I was wondering if the effort is really worth it: 1 click instead of 3 (and maybe some less navigation). ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 2:50 AM :#wellwhat i would really like is this. whenever i click on a java file that extends from markupcontainer, i wouldlike the java editor to open. On the bottom i would like to have tabs, onefor each wicket resource So if i haveMyPanel.java MyPanel.htmlMyPanel.propertiesand i double clik MyPanel.java, i would have three tabs on the bottom for each one of those files, each tab would embed the proper eclipse editor. This would really boost productivity because you wouldnt have to go lookingfor the templates and property files and switching is really easy. But idont even know where to start looking to do something like this. Therenaming stuff wasnt that difficult to find and seemed intuitive, butsomething like this might be over my head for the amount of time i have tospend on it. -Igor I see. I am not a Wicket user (or at least not yet - just been around to figure out if the framework is gonna help me). I guess the editor you are speaking about is quite new. Why? Because usually the multi-tab editors are presenting the same information/file but in different formats, while here you are speaking about 3 different sources. However it looks like the steps to be followed are the following: 1/ look in the WTP to see how this multi-tab editors are done 2/ take the XHTML editor from there 3/ create a component/or whatever we call it that presents together the Eclipse Java editor, an XHTML editor and the Eclipse properties editor. This definitely should work. My approach would be to look what interfaces a source editor must provide and than create a simple implementation based on pure SWT/JFace with multiple tabs. I remember a discussion on the Wicket ML where the markup (HTML file) wasn't named exactly as the Java source. I am not sure if this is supported or not. In case it is supported, than the things may become more complex, as you should go down to the Eclipse Java source parser and extract the exact piece of information to retrieve the HTML name. what do you think about these? do they make any sense to you? ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:44 AM :# unfortunately i havent seen any open source plugins that embed a javaeditor inside a multitabbed editor yet, so its been hard to get my expiration:) unfortunately i just dont have the time to become an eclipse guru towork on this. maybe you can help out. -Igor Let me know what are your future thoughts on the plugin and I willevaluate if I am really able toprovide help :-). ./alex--.w( the_mindstorm
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
It is possible; you can implement a strategy for that. It's super-easy nor is it a prefered way of doing things, so imo such a plugin doesn't have to support it. Eelco On 11/11/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Martijn Dashorst changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 11:52 AM :# And it groups the resources nicely together that belong together. It is kind of a wicket threesome ;-) Martijn Still, it is not clear to me if the scenario I have described in one of my previous mails is possible (to use an HTML markup resource with a different name than the Java source), cause this is almost completely changing the dates of the problem. ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/11/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I think it is worth it because it consolidates what usually is three different editor tabs into one, so i can access more things quickly. i have a 21 screen and i can only see about 6-7 tabs at a time, this plugin would double/tripple that real-estate. and it eliminates all the scrolling you have to do in the package manager, or clicking that link button all the time. -Igor On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 3:16 AM :# well it sounds resonable. but it also sounds like a lot of research and learning, unfortunately i dont think i have time for all that. i barely have enough time to work on wicket and wicket-spring integration stuff. so if someone wants to pick this up they are more then welcome to :) the code is all there in wicket-stuff/wicketeer project. -Igor Understandable. My schedule for this end of year is very tight, so I will most probably not be able to do it. However, if somebody is starting to work on it, probable I will be able to offer some hints. Not planning to sound bad: but I was wondering if the effort is really worth it: 1 click instead of 3 (and maybe some less navigation). ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 2:50 AM :# well what i would really like is this. whenever i click on a java file that extends from markupcontainer, i would like the java editor to open. On the bottom i would like to have tabs, one for each wicket resource So if i have MyPanel.java MyPanel.html MyPanel.properties and i double clik MyPanel.java, i would have three tabs on the bottom for each one of those files, each tab would embed the proper eclipse editor. This would really boost productivity because you wouldnt have to go looking for the templates and property files and switching is really easy. But i dont even know where to start looking to do something like this. The renaming stuff wasnt that difficult to find and seemed intuitive, but something like this might be over my head for the amount of time i have to spend on it. -Igor I see. I am not a Wicket user (or at least not yet - just been around to figure out if the framework is gonna help me). I guess the editor you are speaking about is quite new. Why? Because usually the multi-tab editors are presenting the same information/file but in different formats, while here you are speaking about 3 different sources. However it looks like the steps to be followed are the following: 1/ look in the WTP to see how this multi-tab editors are done 2/ take the XHTML editor from there 3/ create a component/or whatever we call it that presents together the Eclipse Java editor, an XHTML editor and the Eclipse properties editor. This definitely should work. My approach would be to look what interfaces a source editor must provide and than create a simple implementation based on pure SWT/JFace with multiple tabs. I remember a discussion on the Wicket ML where the markup (HTML file) wasn't named exactly as the Java source. I am not sure if this is supported or not. In case it is supported, than the things may become more complex, as you should go down to the Eclipse Java source parser and extract the exact piece of information to retrieve the HTML name. what do you think about these? do they make any sense to you? ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:44 AM :# unfortunately i havent seen any open source plugins that embed a java editor
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
Igor, Eclipse warns me that Discouraged access: The type RenameResourceChange is not accessible due to restriction on required library D:\Programme\eclipse-3.1\eclipse\plugins\org.eclipse.jdt.ui_3.1.1.jar Any idea what I'm doing wrong? What is the easiest way to deploy it. I know I can copy the jars. Isn't there menu entry to deploy it into a specific eclipse installation? thanks Juergen On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: got access to a laptop, and just checked it in. its in wicket-stuff/wicketeer as i said this is my first go at an eclipse plugin so im sure the code isnt as elegant as it could be right now it handles all basic cases, like renaming a class that inherits from markup container and renaming an inner class that inherits from the markup container. one case that is not handled is renaming files for a class that does not inherit from the markup container but has inner classes that do. i would like this to be a community driven effort because i do not have a ton of time to put into this, so any contributions are welcome. And if someone has eclipse experience and wouldnt mind looking over it and giving pointers that would be great too. -Igor On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: i will check it in tonight. -Igor On 11/6/05, Andrew Berman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Definitely would be nice. On 11/6/05, Martijn Dashorst [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: H YEAH! Martijn On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi guys, ive been doing some refactoring lately and got really tired of renaming the .html and .properties file after i renamed the page or panel class. This sucks especially when you have inner classes and you have to rename all inner resources like SomePage$SomeInnerPanel.html I created a small plugin for eclispe that does the renaming of all non-java resources when you rename a class that extends wicket.MarkupContainer . Essentially if you have a page called SomePage class and you rename it to SomeOtherPage all resources SomePage.* in the same package will be renamed to SomeOtherPage.* If there is any interest i can make it available as a wicket-stuff project. keeping in mind that it was my first forray into eclipse, so i cannot guarantee it works 100%. -Igor -- Living a wicket life... Martijn Dashorst - http://www.jroller.com/page/dashorst Wicket 1.1 is out: http://wicket.sourceforge.net/wicket-1.1 --- SF.Net email is sponsored by: Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Download it for free - -and be entered to win a 42 plasma tv or your very own Sony(tm)PSP. Click here to play: http://sourceforge.net/geronimo.php ___ Wicket-user mailing list Wicket-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user --- SF.Net email is sponsored by: Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Download it for free - -and be entered to win a 42 plasma tv or your very own Sony(tm)PSP. Click here to play: http://sourceforge.net/geronimo.php ___ Wicket-user mailing list Wicket-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
Juergen, I get the same warning. Im not really sure why its there. What im thinking is just copying and pasting that class into the plugin's source. As i said, this is my first time fiddling with eclipse. The easiest way i found to deploy it is to let eclipse generate an ant file by right clicking on the MANIFEST.MF and going to pde tools/build ant file and then doing the build using ant. When its done you get the jar file you can drop into the plugins folder. Maybe we can set up an update site if there is more interest. I think the coolest feature this plugin can have is small tabs in the bottom of the editor that would let you switch between java/html/properties files, much like the editor you get when you double click the MANIFEST.MF file. But i have absolutely no clue as to how to do that, so for now i will stick to small features i can figure out how to do - like auto file renaming, etc. -Igor On 11/10/05, Juergen Donnerstag [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Igor,Eclipse warns me that Discouraged access: The typeRenameResourceChange is not accessible due to restriction on requiredlibrary D:\Programme\eclipse-3.1\eclipse\plugins\org.eclipse.jdt.ui_3.1.1.jar Any idea what I'm doing wrong?What is the easiest way to deploy it. I know I can copy the jars.Isn't there menu entry to deploy it into a specific eclipseinstallation?thanksJuergen On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: got access to a laptop, and just checked it in. its in wicket-stuff/wicketeer as i said this is my first go at an eclipse plugin so im sure the code isnt as elegant as it could be right now it handles all basic cases, like renaming a class that inherits from markup container and renaming an inner class that inherits from the markup container. one case that is not handled is renaming files for a class that does not inherit from the markup container but has inner classes that do. i would like this to be a community driven effort because i do not have a ton of time to put into this, so any contributions are welcome. And if someone has eclipse experience and wouldnt mind looking over it and giving pointers that would be great too. -Igor On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: i will check it in tonight. -Igor On 11/6/05, Andrew Berman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Definitely would be nice. On 11/6/05, Martijn Dashorst [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:H YEAH! Martijn On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi guys, ive been doing some refactoring lately and got really tired of renaming the .html and .properties file after i renamed the page or panel class. This sucks especially when you have inner classes and you have to rename all inner resources like SomePage$SomeInnerPanel.htmlI created a small plugin for eclispe that does the renaming of all non-java resources when you rename a class that extends wicket.MarkupContainer .Essentially if you have a page called SomePage class and you rename it to SomeOtherPage all resources SomePage.* in the same package will be renamed to SomeOtherPage.*If there is any interest i can make it available as a wicket-stuff project. keeping in mind that it was my first forray into eclipse, so i cannot guarantee it works 100%.-Igor --Living a wicket life... Martijn Dashorst - http://www.jroller.com/page/dashorst Wicket 1.1 is out: http://wicket.sourceforge.net/wicket-1.1 ---SF.Net email is sponsored by: Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Downloadit for free - -and be entered to win a 42 plasma tv or your very ownSony(tm)PSP.Click here to play: http://sourceforge.net/geronimo.php___Wicket-user mailing list Wicket-user@lists.sourceforge.nethttps://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user ---SF.Net email is sponsored by:Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Download it for free - -and be entered to win a 42 plasma tv or your very ownSony(tm)PSP.Click here to play: http://sourceforge.net/geronimo.php___ Wicket-user mailing listWicket-user@lists.sourceforge.nethttps://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
#: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:01 AM :# Juergen, I get the same warning. Im not really sure why its there. What im thinking is just copying and pasting that class into the plugin's source. As i said, this is my first time fiddling with eclipse. The easiest way i found to deploy it is to let eclipse generate an ant file by right clicking on the MANIFEST.MF and going to pde tools/build ant file and then doing the build using ant. When its done you get the jar file you can drop into the plugins folder. Maybe we can set up an update site if there is more interest. I think the coolest feature this plugin can have is small tabs in the bottom of the editor that would let you switch between java/html/properties files, much like the editor you get when you double click the MANIFEST.MF file. But i have absolutely no clue as to how to do that, so for now i will stick to small features i can figure out how to do - like auto file renaming, etc. -Igor Usually, while doing this it is a good idea to identify that feature in some core plugin or open source plugin and get your inspiration. At least this worked for me while developing a couple of Eclipse plugins, including the TestNG one. hth, ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Juergen Donnerstag [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Igor, Eclipse warns me that Discouraged access: The type RenameResourceChange is not accessible due to restriction on required library D:\Programme\eclipse- 3.1\eclipse\plugins\org.eclipse.jdt.ui_3.1.1.jar Any idea what I'm doing wrong? What is the easiest way to deploy it. I know I can copy the jars. Isn't there menu entry to deploy it into a specific eclipse installation? thanks Juergen On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: got access to a laptop, and just checked it in. its in wicket-stuff/wicketeer as i said this is my first go at an eclipse plugin so im sure the code isnt as elegant as it could be right now it handles all basic cases, like renaming a class that inherits from markup container and renaming an inner class that inherits from the markup container. one case that is not handled is renaming files for a class that does not inherit from the markup container but has inner classes that do. i would like this to be a community driven effort because i do not have a ton of time to put into this, so any contributions are welcome. And if someone has eclipse experience and wouldnt mind looking over it and giving pointers that would be great too. -Igor On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: i will check it in tonight. -Igor On 11/6/05, Andrew Berman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Definitely would be nice. On 11/6/05, Martijn Dashorst [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: H YEAH! Martijn On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi guys, ive been doing some refactoring lately and got really tired of renaming the .html and .properties file after i renamed the page or panel class. This sucks especially when you have inner classes and you have to rename all inner resources like SomePage$SomeInnerPanel.html I created a small plugin for eclispe that does the renaming of all non-java resources when you rename a class that extends wicket.MarkupContainer . Essentially if you have a page called SomePage class and you rename it to SomeOtherPage all resources SomePage.* in the same package will be renamed to SomeOtherPage.* If there is any interest i can make it available as a wicket-stuff project. keeping in mind that it was my first forray into eclipse, so i cannot guarantee it works 100%. -Igor -- Living a wicket life... Martijn Dashorst - http://www.jroller.com/page/dashorst Wicket 1.1 is out: http://wicket.sourceforge.net/wicket-1.1 --- SF.Net email is sponsored by: Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Download it for free - -and be entered to win a 42 plasma tv or your very own Sony(tm)PSP. Click here to play: http://sourceforge.net/geronimo.php ___ Wicket-user mailing list Wicket-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user --- SF.Net email is sponsored by: Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Download it for free - -and be entered to win a 42 plasma tv or your very own Sony(tm)PSP. Click here to play: http://sourceforge.net/geronimo.php ___ Wicket-user mailing list Wicket-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
unfortunately i havent seen any open source plugins that embed a java editor inside a multitabbed editor yet, so its been hard to get my expiration :) unfortunately i just dont have the time to become an eclipse guru to work on this. maybe you can help out. -Igor On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on11/11/2005 12:01 AM :# Juergen, I get the same warning. Im not really sure why its there. What im thinking is just copying and pasting that class into the plugin's source. As i said, this is my first time fiddling with eclipse. The easiest way i found to deploy it is to let eclipse generate an ant file by right clicking on the MANIFEST.MF and going to pde tools/build ant file and then doing the build using ant. When its done you get the jar file you can drop into the plugins folder. Maybe we can set up an update site if there is more interest. I think the coolest feature this plugin can have is small tabs in the bottom of the editor that would let you switch between java/html/properties files, much like the editor you get when you double click the MANIFEST.MF file. But i have absolutely no clue as to how to do that, so for now i will stick to small features i can figure out how to do - like auto file renaming, etc. -IgorUsually, while doing this it is a good idea to identify that feature in some core plugin or open source plugin and get your inspiration.At least this worked for me while developing a couple of Eclipse plugins, including the TestNG one.hth,./alex--.w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Juergen Donnerstag [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Igor, Eclipse warns me that Discouraged access: The type RenameResourceChange is not accessible due to restriction on required library D:\Programme\eclipse- 3.1\eclipse\plugins\org.eclipse.jdt.ui_3.1.1.jar Any idea what I'm doing wrong? What is the easiest way to deploy it. I know I can copy the jars. Isn't there menu entry to deploy it into a specific eclipse installation? thanks Juergen On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: got access to a laptop, and just checked it in. its in wicket-stuff/wicketeer as i said this is my first go at an eclipse plugin so im sure the code isnt as elegant as it could be right now it handles all basic cases, like renaming a class that inherits from markup container and renaming an inner class that inherits from the markup container. one case that is not handled is renaming files for a class that does not inherit from the markup container but has inner classes that do. i would like this to be a community driven effort because i do not have a ton of time to put into this, so any contributions are welcome. And if someone has eclipse experience and wouldnt mind looking over it and giving pointers that would be great too. -Igor On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: i will check it in tonight. -Igor On 11/6/05, Andrew Berman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:Definitely would be nice. On 11/6/05, Martijn Dashorst [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: H YEAH! Martijn On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi guys, ive been doing some refactoring lately and got really tired of renaming the .html and .properties file after i renamed the page or panel class. This sucks especially when you have inner classes and you have to rename all inner resources like SomePage$SomeInnerPanel.html I created a small plugin for eclispe that does the renaming of all non-java resources when you rename a class that extends wicket.MarkupContainer . Essentially if you have a page called SomePage class and you rename it to SomeOtherPage all resources SomePage.* in the same package will be renamed to SomeOtherPage.* If there is any interest i can make it available as a wicket-stuff project. keeping in mind that it was my first forray into eclipse, so i cannot guarantee it works 100%. -Igor -- Living a wicket life... Martijn Dashorst - http://www.jroller.com/page/dashorst Wicket 1.1 is out: http://wicket.sourceforge.net/wicket-1.1 --- SF.Net email is sponsored by: Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Download it for free - -and be entered to win a 42 plasma tv or your very own Sony(tm)PSP. Click here to play: http://sourceforge.net/geronimo.php ___ Wicket-user mailing list Wicket-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user --- SF.Net email is sponsored by: Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Download it for free - -and
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
#: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:44 AM :# unfortunately i havent seen any open source plugins that embed a java editor inside a multitabbed editor yet, so its been hard to get my expiration :) unfortunately i just dont have the time to become an eclipse guru to work on this. maybe you can help out. -Igor Let me know what are your future thoughts on the plugin and I will evaluate if I am really able to provide help :-). ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. ps: if you want to reach me offline pls use the_mindstorm[at]evolva[dot]ro. thanks On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:01 AM :# Juergen, I get the same warning. Im not really sure why its there. What im thinking is just copying and pasting that class into the plugin's source. As i said, this is my first time fiddling with eclipse. The easiest way i found to deploy it is to let eclipse generate an ant file by right clicking on the MANIFEST.MF and going to pde tools/build ant file and then doing the build using ant. When its done you get the jar file you can drop into the plugins folder. Maybe we can set up an update site if there is more interest. I think the coolest feature this plugin can have is small tabs in the bottom of the editor that would let you switch between java/html/properties files, much like the editor you get when you double click the MANIFEST.MF file. But i have absolutely no clue as to how to do that, so for now i will stick to small features i can figure out how to do - like auto file renaming, etc. -Igor Usually, while doing this it is a good idea to identify that feature in some core plugin or open source plugin and get your inspiration. At least this worked for me while developing a couple of Eclipse plugins, including the TestNG one. hth, ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Juergen Donnerstag [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Igor, Eclipse warns me that Discouraged access: The type RenameResourceChange is not accessible due to restriction on required library D:\Programme\eclipse- 3.1\eclipse\plugins\org.eclipse.jdt.ui_3.1.1.jar Any idea what I'm doing wrong? What is the easiest way to deploy it. I know I can copy the jars. Isn't there menu entry to deploy it into a specific eclipse installation? thanks Juergen On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: got access to a laptop, and just checked it in. its in wicket-stuff/wicketeer as i said this is my first go at an eclipse plugin so im sure the code isnt as elegant as it could be right now it handles all basic cases, like renaming a class that inherits from markup container and renaming an inner class that inherits from the markup container. one case that is not handled is renaming files for a class that does not inherit from the markup container but has inner classes that do. i would like this to be a community driven effort because i do not have a ton of time to put into this, so any contributions are welcome. And if someone has eclipse experience and wouldnt mind looking over it and giving pointers that would be great too. -Igor On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: i will check it in tonight. -Igor On 11/6/05, Andrew Berman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Definitely would be nice. On 11/6/05, Martijn Dashorst [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: H YEAH! Martijn On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi guys, ive been doing some refactoring lately and got really tired of renaming the .html and .properties file after i renamed the page or panel class. This sucks especially when you have inner classes and you have to rename all inner resources like SomePage$SomeInnerPanel.html I created a small plugin for eclispe that does the renaming of all non-java resources when you rename a class that extends wicket.MarkupContainer . Essentially if you have a page called SomePage class and you rename it to SomeOtherPage all resources SomePage.* in the same package will be renamed to SomeOtherPage.* If there is any interest i can make it available as a wicket-stuff project. keeping in mind that it was my first forray into eclipse, so i cannot guarantee it works 100%. -Igor -- Living a wicket life... Martijn Dashorst - http://www.jroller.com/page/dashorst Wicket 1.1 is out: http://wicket.sourceforge.net/wicket-1.1 --- SF.Net email is sponsored by: Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Download it for free - -and be entered to win a 42 plasma tv or your very
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
well what i would really like is this. whenever i click on a java file that extends from markupcontainer, i would like the java editor to open. On the bottom i would like to have tabs, one for each wicket resource So if i have MyPanel.java MyPanel.html MyPanel.properties and i double clik MyPanel.java, i would have three tabs on the bottom for each one of those files, each tab would embed the proper eclipse editor. This would really boost productivity because you wouldnt have to go looking for the templates and property files and switching is really easy. But i dont even know where to start looking to do something like this. The renaming stuff wasnt that difficult to find and seemed intuitive, but something like this might be over my head for the amount of time i have to spend on it. -Igor On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on11/11/2005 12:44 AM :# unfortunately i havent seen any open source plugins that embed a java editor inside a multitabbed editor yet, so its been hard to get my expiration :) unfortunately i just dont have the time to become an eclipse guru to work on this. maybe you can help out. -IgorLet me know what are your future thoughts on the plugin and I will evaluate if I am really able to provide help :-)../alex--.w( the_mindstorm )p.ps: if you want to reach me offline pls use the_mindstorm[at]evolva[dot]ro. thanks On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:01 AM :# Juergen, I get the same warning. Im not really sure why its there. What im thinking is just copying and pasting that class into the plugin's source. As i said, this is my first time fiddling with eclipse. The easiest way i found to deploy it is to let eclipse generate an ant file by right clicking on the MANIFEST.MF and going to pde tools/build ant file and then doing the build using ant. When its done you get the jar file you can drop into the plugins folder. Maybe we can set up an update site if there is more interest. I think the coolest feature this plugin can have is small tabs in the bottom of the editor that would let you switch between java/html/properties files, much like the editor you get when you double click the MANIFEST.MF file. But i have absolutely no clue as to how to do that, so for now i will stick to small features i can figure out how to do - like auto file renaming, etc. -Igor Usually, while doing this it is a good idea to identify that feature in some core plugin or open source plugin and get your inspiration. At least this worked for me while developing a couple of Eclipse plugins, including the TestNG one. hth, ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Juergen Donnerstag [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Igor, Eclipse warns me that Discouraged access: The type RenameResourceChange is not accessible due to restriction on required library D:\Programme\eclipse- 3.1\eclipse\plugins\org.eclipse.jdt.ui_3.1.1.jar Any idea what I'm doing wrong? What is the easiest way to deploy it. I know I can copy the jars. Isn't there menu entry to deploy it into a specific eclipse installation? thanks Juergen On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: got access to a laptop, and just checked it in. its in wicket-stuff/wicketeer as i said this is my first go at an eclipse plugin so im sure the code isnt as elegant as it could be right now it handles all basic cases, like renaming a class that inherits from markup container and renaming an inner class that inherits from the markup container. one case that is not handled is renaming files for a class that does not inherit from the markup container but has inner classes that do. i would like this to be a community driven effort because i do not have a ton of time to put into this, so any contributions are welcome. And if someone has eclipse experience and wouldnt mind looking over it and giving pointers that would be great too. -Igor On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:i will check it in tonight.-Igor On 11/6/05, Andrew Berman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Definitely would be nice. On 11/6/05, Martijn Dashorst [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: H YEAH! Martijn On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi guys, ive been doing some refactoring lately and got really tired of renaming the .html and .properties file after i renamed the page or panel class. This sucks especially when you have inner classes and you have to rename all inner resources like SomePage$SomeInnerPanel.html I created a small plugin for eclispe that does the renaming of all non-java resources when you rename a class that extends wicket.MarkupContainer .
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
#: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 2:50 AM :# well what i would really like is this. whenever i click on a java file that extends from markupcontainer, i would like the java editor to open. On the bottom i would like to have tabs, one for each wicket resource So if i have MyPanel.java MyPanel.html MyPanel.properties and i double clik MyPanel.java, i would have three tabs on the bottom for each one of those files, each tab would embed the proper eclipse editor. This would really boost productivity because you wouldnt have to go looking for the templates and property files and switching is really easy. But i dont even know where to start looking to do something like this. The renaming stuff wasnt that difficult to find and seemed intuitive, but something like this might be over my head for the amount of time i have to spend on it. -Igor I see. I am not a Wicket user (or at least not yet - just been around to figure out if the framework is gonna help me). I guess the editor you are speaking about is quite new. Why? Because usually the multi-tab editors are presenting the same information/file but in different formats, while here you are speaking about 3 different sources. However it looks like the steps to be followed are the following: 1/ look in the WTP to see how this multi-tab editors are done 2/ take the XHTML editor from there 3/ create a component/or whatever we call it that presents together the Eclipse Java editor, an XHTML editor and the Eclipse properties editor. This definitely should work. My approach would be to look what interfaces a source editor must provide and than create a simple implementation based on pure SWT/JFace with multiple tabs. I remember a discussion on the Wicket ML where the markup (HTML file) wasn't named exactly as the Java source. I am not sure if this is supported or not. In case it is supported, than the things may become more complex, as you should go down to the Eclipse Java source parser and extract the exact piece of information to retrieve the HTML name. what do you think about these? do they make any sense to you? ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:44 AM :# unfortunately i havent seen any open source plugins that embed a java editor inside a multitabbed editor yet, so its been hard to get my expiration :) unfortunately i just dont have the time to become an eclipse guru to work on this. maybe you can help out. -Igor Let me know what are your future thoughts on the plugin and I will evaluate if I am really able to provide help :-). ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. ps: if you want to reach me offline pls use the_mindstorm[at]evolva[dot]ro. thanks On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:01 AM :# Juergen, I get the same warning. Im not really sure why its there. What im thinking is just copying and pasting that class into the plugin's source. As i said, this is my first time fiddling with eclipse. The easiest way i found to deploy it is to let eclipse generate an ant file by right clicking on the MANIFEST.MF and going to pde tools/build ant file and then doing the build using ant. When its done you get the jar file you can drop into the plugins folder. Maybe we can set up an update site if there is more interest. I think the coolest feature this plugin can have is small tabs in the bottom of the editor that would let you switch between java/html/properties files, much like the editor you get when you double click the MANIFEST.MF file. But i have absolutely no clue as to how to do that, so for now i will stick to small features i can figure out how to do - like auto file renaming, etc. -Igor Usually, while doing this it is a good idea to identify that feature in some core plugin or open source plugin and get your inspiration. At least this worked for me while developing a couple of Eclipse plugins, including the TestNG one. hth, ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Juergen Donnerstag [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Igor, Eclipse warns me that Discouraged access: The type RenameResourceChange is not accessible due to restriction on required library D:\Programme\eclipse- 3.1\eclipse\plugins\org.eclipse.jdt.ui_3.1.1.jar Any idea what I'm doing wrong? What is the easiest way to deploy it. I know I can copy the jars. Isn't there menu entry to deploy it into a specific eclipse installation? thanks Juergen On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: got access to a laptop, and just checked it in. its in wicket-stuff/wicketeer as i said this is my first go at an eclipse plugin so im sure the code isnt as elegant as it could be right now
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
well it sounds resonable. but it also sounds like a lot of research and learning, unfortunately i dont think i have time for all that. i barely have enough time to work on wicket and wicket-spring integration stuff. so if someone wants to pick this up they are more then welcome to :) the code is all there in wicket-stuff/wicketeer project. -Igor On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on11/11/2005 2:50 AM :# well what i would really like is this. whenever i click on a java file that extends from markupcontainer, i would like the java editor to open. On the bottom i would like to have tabs, one for each wicket resource So if i have MyPanel.java MyPanel.html MyPanel.properties and i double clik MyPanel.java, i would have three tabs on the bottom for each one of those files, each tab would embed the proper eclipse editor. This would really boost productivity because you wouldnt have to go looking for the templates and property files and switching is really easy. But i dont even know where to start looking to do something like this. The renaming stuff wasnt that difficult to find and seemed intuitive, but something like this might be over my head for the amount of time i have to spend on it. -IgorI see. I am not a Wicket user (or at least not yet - just been around to figure out if the framework is gonna help me).I guess the editor you are speaking about is quite new. Why? Because usually the multi-tab editorsare presenting the same information/file but in different formats, while here you are speaking about 3 different sources. However it looks like the steps to be followed are the following:1/ look in the WTP to see how this multi-tab editors are done2/ take the XHTML editor from there3/ create a component/or whatever we call it that presents together the Eclipse Java editor, an XHTML editor and the Eclipse properties editor.This definitely should work. My approach would be to look what interfaces a source editor mustprovide and than create a simple implementation based on pure SWT/JFace with multiple tabs. I remember a discussion on the Wicket ML where the markup (HTML file) wasn't named exactly as theJava source. I am not sure if this is supported or not. In case it is supported, than the things maybecome more complex, as you should go down to the Eclipse Java source parser and extract the exact piece of information to retrieve the HTML name.what do you think about these? do they make any sense to you?./alex--.w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:44 AM :# unfortunately i havent seen any open source plugins that embed a java editor inside a multitabbed editor yet, so its been hard to get my expiration :) unfortunately i just dont have the time to become an eclipse guru to work on this. maybe you can help out. -Igor Let me know what are your future thoughts on the plugin and I will evaluate if I am really able to provide help :-). ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. ps: if you want to reach me offline pls use the_mindstorm[at]evolva[dot]ro. thanks On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:01 AM :# Juergen, I get the same warning. Im not really sure why its there. What im thinking is just copying and pasting that class into the plugin's source. As i said, this is my first time fiddling with eclipse. The easiest way i found to deploy it is to let eclipse generate an ant file by right clicking on the MANIFEST.MF and going to pde tools/build ant file and then doing the build using ant. When its done you get the jar file you can drop into the plugins folder. Maybe we can set up an update site if there is more interest. I think the coolest feature this plugin can have is small tabs in the bottom of the editor that would let you switch between java/html/properties files, much like the editor you get when you double click the MANIFEST.MF file. But i have absolutely no clue as to how to do that, so for now i will stick to small features i can figure out how to do - like auto file renaming, etc. -Igor Usually, while doing this it is a good idea to identify that feature in some core plugin or open source plugin and get your inspiration. At least this worked for me while developing a couple of Eclipse plugins, including the TestNG one. hth, ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p.On 11/10/05, Juergen Donnerstag [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Igor, Eclipse warns me that Discouraged access: The type RenameResourceChange is not accessible due to restriction on required library D:\Programme\eclipse- 3.1\eclipse\plugins\org.eclipse.jdt.ui_3.1.1.jar Any idea what I'm doing wrong? What is the easiest way to deploy it. I know I can copy the
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
#: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 3:16 AM :# well it sounds resonable. but it also sounds like a lot of research and learning, unfortunately i dont think i have time for all that. i barely have enough time to work on wicket and wicket-spring integration stuff. so if someone wants to pick this up they are more then welcome to :) the code is all there in wicket-stuff/wicketeer project. -Igor Understandable. My schedule for this end of year is very tight, so I will most probably not be able to do it. However, if somebody is starting to work on it, probable I will be able to offer some hints. Not planning to sound bad: but I was wondering if the effort is really worth it: 1 click instead of 3 (and maybe some less navigation). ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 2:50 AM :# well what i would really like is this. whenever i click on a java file that extends from markupcontainer, i would like the java editor to open. On the bottom i would like to have tabs, one for each wicket resource So if i have MyPanel.java MyPanel.html MyPanel.properties and i double clik MyPanel.java, i would have three tabs on the bottom for each one of those files, each tab would embed the proper eclipse editor. This would really boost productivity because you wouldnt have to go looking for the templates and property files and switching is really easy. But i dont even know where to start looking to do something like this. The renaming stuff wasnt that difficult to find and seemed intuitive, but something like this might be over my head for the amount of time i have to spend on it. -Igor I see. I am not a Wicket user (or at least not yet - just been around to figure out if the framework is gonna help me). I guess the editor you are speaking about is quite new. Why? Because usually the multi-tab editors are presenting the same information/file but in different formats, while here you are speaking about 3 different sources. However it looks like the steps to be followed are the following: 1/ look in the WTP to see how this multi-tab editors are done 2/ take the XHTML editor from there 3/ create a component/or whatever we call it that presents together the Eclipse Java editor, an XHTML editor and the Eclipse properties editor. This definitely should work. My approach would be to look what interfaces a source editor must provide and than create a simple implementation based on pure SWT/JFace with multiple tabs. I remember a discussion on the Wicket ML where the markup (HTML file) wasn't named exactly as the Java source. I am not sure if this is supported or not. In case it is supported, than the things may become more complex, as you should go down to the Eclipse Java source parser and extract the exact piece of information to retrieve the HTML name. what do you think about these? do they make any sense to you? ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:44 AM :# unfortunately i havent seen any open source plugins that embed a java editor inside a multitabbed editor yet, so its been hard to get my expiration :) unfortunately i just dont have the time to become an eclipse guru to work on this. maybe you can help out. -Igor Let me know what are your future thoughts on the plugin and I will evaluate if I am really able to provide help :-). ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. ps: if you want to reach me offline pls use the_mindstorm[at]evolva[dot]ro. thanks On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:01 AM :# Juergen, I get the same warning. Im not really sure why its there. What im thinking is just copying and pasting that class into the plugin's source. As i said, this is my first time fiddling with eclipse. The easiest way i found to deploy it is to let eclipse generate an ant file by right clicking on the MANIFEST.MF and going to pde tools/build ant file and then doing the build using ant. When its done you get the jar file you can drop into the plugins folder. Maybe we can set up an update site if there is more interest. I think the coolest feature this plugin can have is small tabs in the bottom of the editor that would let you switch between java/html/properties files, much like the editor you get when you double click the MANIFEST.MFfile. But i have absolutely no clue as to how to do that, so for now i will stick to small features i can figure out how to do - like auto file renaming, etc. -Igor Usually, while doing this it is a good idea to identify that feature in some core plugin or
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
I think it is worth it because it consolidates what usually is three different editor tabs into one, so i can access more things quickly. i have a 21 screen and i can only see about 6-7 tabs at a time, this plugin would double/tripple that real-estate. and it eliminates all the scrolling you have to do in the package manager, or clicking that link button all the time. -Igor On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on11/11/2005 3:16 AM :# well it sounds resonable. but it also sounds like a lot of research and learning, unfortunately i dont think i have time for all that. i barely have enough time to work on wicket and wicket-spring integration stuff. so if someone wants to pick this up they are more then welcome to :) the code is all there in wicket-stuff/wicketeer project. -IgorUnderstandable. My schedule for this end of year is very tight, so I will most probably not be ableto do it. However, if somebody is starting to work on it, probable I will be able to offer some hints. Not planning to sound bad: but I was wondering if the effort is really worth it: 1 click instead of3 (and maybe some less navigation)../alex--.w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 2:50 AM :# well what i would really like is this. whenever i click on a java file that extends from markupcontainer, i would like the java editor to open. On the bottom i would like to have tabs, one for each wicket resource So if i have MyPanel.java MyPanel.html MyPanel.properties and i double clik MyPanel.java, i would have three tabs on the bottom for each one of those files, each tab would embed the proper eclipse editor. This would really boost productivity because you wouldnt have to go looking for the templates and property files and switching is really easy. But i dont even know where to start looking to do something like this. The renaming stuff wasnt that difficult to find and seemed intuitive, but something like this might be over my head for the amount of time i have to spend on it. -Igor I see. I am not a Wicket user (or at least not yet - just been around to figure out if the framework is gonna help me). I guess the editor you are speaking about is quite new. Why? Because usually the multi-tab editors are presenting the same information/file but in different formats, while here you are speaking about 3 different sources. However it looks like the steps to be followed are the following: 1/ look in the WTP to see how this multi-tab editors are done 2/ take the XHTML editor from there 3/ create a component/or whatever we call it that presents together the Eclipse Java editor, an XHTML editor and the Eclipse properties editor. This definitely should work. My approach would be to look what interfaces a source editor must provide and than create a simple implementation based on pure SWT/JFace with multiple tabs. I remember a discussion on the Wicket ML where the markup (HTML file) wasn't named exactly as the Java source. I am not sure if this is supported or not. In case it is supported, than the things may become more complex, as you should go down to the Eclipse Java source parser and extract the exact piece of information to retrieve the HTML name. what do you think about these? do they make any sense to you? ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. On 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:44 AM :# unfortunately i havent seen any open source plugins that embed a java editor inside a multitabbed editor yet, so its been hard to get my expiration :) unfortunately i just dont have the time to become an eclipse guru to work on this. maybe you can help out. -Igor Let me know what are your future thoughts on the plugin and I will evaluate if I am really able to provide help :-). ./alex -- .w( the_mindstorm )p. ps: if you want to reach me offline pls use the_mindstorm[at]evolva[dot]ro. thanksOn 11/10/05, Alexandru Popescu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: #: Igor Vaynberg changed the world a bit at a time by saying on 11/11/2005 12:01 AM :# Juergen,I get the same warning. Im not really sure why its there. What im thinkingis just copying and pasting that class into the plugin's source. As i said,this is my first time fiddling with eclipse. The easiest way i found to deploy it is to let eclipse generate an ant fileby right clicking on the MANIFEST.MF and going to pde tools/build ant fileand then doing the build using ant. When its done you get the jar file youcan drop into the plugins folder. Maybe we can set up an update site if there is more interest. I think thecoolest feature this plugin can have is small tabs in the bottom of the
[Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
Hi guys, ive been doing some refactoring lately and got really tired of renaming the .html and .properties file after i renamed the page or panel class. This sucks especially when you have inner classes and you have to rename all inner resources like SomePage$SomeInnerPanel.html I created a small plugin for eclispe that does the renaming of all non-java resources when you rename a class that extends wicket.MarkupContainer. Essentially if you have a page called SomePage class and you rename it to SomeOtherPage all resources SomePage.* in the same package will be renamed to SomeOtherPage.* If there is any interest i can make it available as a wicket-stuff project. keeping in mind that it was my first forray into eclipse, so i cannot guarantee it works 100%. -Igor
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
that looks nice and handyOn 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi guys, ive been doing some refactoring lately and got really tired of renaming the .html and .properties file after i renamed the page or panel class. This sucks especially when you have inner classes and you have to rename all inner resources like SomePage$SomeInnerPanel.html I created a small plugin for eclispe that does the renaming of all non-java resources when you rename a class that extends wicket.MarkupContainer. Essentially if you have a page called SomePage class and you rename it to SomeOtherPage all resources SomePage.* in the same package will be renamed to SomeOtherPage.* If there is any interest i can make it available as a wicket-stuff project. keeping in mind that it was my first forray into eclipse, so i cannot guarantee it works 100%. -Igor
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
H YEAH! Martijn On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi guys, ive been doing some refactoring lately and got really tired of renaming the .html and .properties file after i renamed the page or panel class. This sucks especially when you have inner classes and you have to rename all inner resources like SomePage$SomeInnerPanel.html I created a small plugin for eclispe that does the renaming of all non-java resources when you rename a class that extends wicket.MarkupContainer. Essentially if you have a page called SomePage class and you rename it to SomeOtherPage all resources SomePage.* in the same package will be renamed to SomeOtherPage.* If there is any interest i can make it available as a wicket-stuff project. keeping in mind that it was my first forray into eclipse, so i cannot guarantee it works 100%. -Igor -- Living a wicket life... Martijn Dashorst - http://www.jroller.com/page/dashorst Wicket 1.1 is out: http://wicket.sourceforge.net/wicket-1.1 --- SF.Net email is sponsored by: Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Download it for free - -and be entered to win a 42 plasma tv or your very own Sony(tm)PSP. Click here to play: http://sourceforge.net/geronimo.php ___ Wicket-user mailing list Wicket-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
Definitely would be nice.On 11/6/05, Martijn Dashorst [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: H YEAH!MartijnOn 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi guys, ive been doing some refactoring lately and got really tired of renaming the .html and .properties file after i renamed the page or panel class. This sucks especially when you have inner classes and you have to rename all inner resources like SomePage$SomeInnerPanel.html I created a small plugin for eclispe that does the renaming of all non-java resources when you rename a class that extends wicket.MarkupContainer.Essentially if you have a page called SomePage class and you rename it to SomeOtherPage all resources SomePage.* in the same package will be renamed to SomeOtherPage.*If there is any interest i can make it available as a wicket-stuff project. keeping in mind that it was my first forray into eclipse, so i cannot guarantee it works 100%.-Igor--Living a wicket life...Martijn Dashorst - http://www.jroller.com/page/dashorst Wicket 1.1 is out: http://wicket.sourceforge.net/wicket-1.1---SF.Net email is sponsored by: Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Downloadit for free - -and be entered to win a 42 plasma tv or your very ownSony(tm)PSP.Click here to play: http://sourceforge.net/geronimo.php___Wicket-user mailing listWicket-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user
Re: [Wicket-user] eclipse refactoring plugin
got access to a laptop, and just checked it in. its in wicket-stuff/wicketeer as i said this is my first go at an eclipse plugin so im sure the code isnt as elegant as it could be right now it handles all basic cases, like renaminga class that inherits from markup container and renaming an inner class that inherits from the markup container. one case that is not handled is renaming files for a class that does not inherit from the markup container but has inner classes that do. i would like this to be a community driven effort because i do not have a ton of time to put into this, so any contributions are welcome. And if someone has eclipse experience and wouldnt mind looking over it and giving pointers that would be great too. -Igor On 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: i will check it in tonight.-Igor On 11/6/05, Andrew Berman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Definitely would be nice. On 11/6/05, Martijn Dashorst [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: H YEAH!MartijnOn 11/6/05, Igor Vaynberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi guys, ive been doing some refactoring lately and got really tired of renaming the .html and .properties file after i renamed the page or panel class. This sucks especially when you have inner classes and you have to rename all inner resources like SomePage$SomeInnerPanel.html I created a small plugin for eclispe that does the renaming of all non-java resources when you rename a class that extends wicket.MarkupContainer .Essentially if you have a page called SomePage class and you rename it to SomeOtherPage all resources SomePage.* in the same package will be renamed to SomeOtherPage.*If there is any interest i can make it available as a wicket-stuff project. keeping in mind that it was my first forray into eclipse, so i cannot guarantee it works 100%.-Igor--Living a wicket life...Martijn Dashorst - http://www.jroller.com/page/dashorst Wicket 1.1 is out: http://wicket.sourceforge.net/wicket-1.1 --- SF.Net email is sponsored by: Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Downloadit for free - -and be entered to win a 42 plasma tv or your very own Sony(tm)PSP.Click here to play: http://sourceforge.net/geronimo.php___ Wicket-user mailing listWicket-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user