On Sat, Mar 21, 2009 at 5:12 PM, David Pollak
wrote:
> It's not a high priority for us to spend a lot of time with classloader
> magic to try to figure out what source files relate to which class files
> which may or may not be loaded or changed. So, it's unlikely to happen any
> time soon.
goo
On Sat, Mar 21, 2009 at 8:59 AM, Alexander Kellett wrote:
>
> On Sat, Mar 21, 2009 at 4:49 PM, David Pollak
> wrote:
> > On Sat, Mar 21, 2009 at 7:24 AM, Alexander Kellett
> >> unfortunately, as scala:cc is polling rather than using a filesystem
> >> notifier, the latency between file modificati
On Sat, Mar 21, 2009 at 4:49 PM, David Pollak
wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 21, 2009 at 7:24 AM, Alexander Kellett
>> unfortunately, as scala:cc is polling rather than using a filesystem
>> notifier, the latency between file modification and .class update is
>> huge.
>
> This is almost all compilation ti
On Sat, Mar 21, 2009 at 7:24 AM, Alexander Kellett wrote:
>
> thank you for the suggestion (and realy nice of javarebel to make
> this available to scala devels!), much nicer than refreshing and
> getting a jetty no-contexts page.
>
> unfortunately, as scala:cc is polling rather than using a f
seems like java has this:
mac via kqueues, jna api but unmerged:
http://ochafik.free.fr/blog/?p=119
windows via win32 native, in jna:
https://jna.dev.java.net/source/browse/jna/trunk/jnalib/src/com/sun/jna/examples/FileMonitor.java?rev=HEAD&view=markup
linux via inotify, sh
thank you for the suggestion (and realy nice of javarebel to make
this available to scala devels!), much nicer than refreshing and
getting a jetty no-contexts page.
unfortunately, as scala:cc is polling rather than using a filesystem
notifier, the latency between file modification and .class
Alex, you could always use JavaRebel... This will replace the classes
dynamically for you instantly (no more Jetty reboots required, just browser
refresh). They do a scala only version of JavaRebel that you can download
for free.
Thanks
Tim
On 19/03/2009 15:12, "Alexander Kellett" wrote:
>
is it possible for lift to block until such compiles are redone? the
compiler is simply too slow at this point to be used with such an
interactive cycle for me alas. i reload and get either the old, or
500s. simply too error prone.
Alex
On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 6:02 AM, David Pollak
wrote:
> One
On Fri, Mar 6, 2009 at 12:18 AM, jeff.chen.gr...@gmail.com
wrote:
>
> Hi - I installed NetBeans and Scala/Maven plugins following
> instructions here
>
> http://wiki.netbeans.org/Scala
>
> However when I try to create a project, I got a version error - any
> help? I used latest scala plugin 1.5.1
I am currently using NetBeans to build a GUI application using Scala
swing without too much pain. Compilation is kind of slow, but that's
probably my laptop... The app uses JFreeCharts and an embedded Berkeley
DB XML database, and that has gone surprisingly smoothly. I haven't
figured out how
Hi - I installed NetBeans and Scala/Maven plugins following
instructions here
http://wiki.netbeans.org/Scala
However when I try to create a project, I got a version error - any
help? I used latest scala plugin 1.5.1
NetBeans: Executing 'mvn -DarchetypeVersion=0.10 -
Darchetype.interactive=false
On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 8:57 PM, Paul Stickney wrote:
>
> Paulo,
>
> I use the Eclipse Scala Plugin; the continuous build integration is a
> major factor to me in selecting it over the NB plugin (but I haven't
> used NB in several months now).
One can get continuous build with any editor. mvn s
Paulo,
I use the Eclipse Scala Plugin; the continuous build integration is a
major factor to me in selecting it over the NB plugin (but I haven't
used NB in several months now).
If you do use, it, I would recommend keeping up with the /latest/
2.8.0.whatever development snapshot (or at least som
I'm currently using "Scala for NetBeans" to develop Erlang plugins for
NetBeans, I'm continually improving it as I'm the daily user too.
Hope to release a new one when NetBeans 6.7 is released.
Bug reports can be put on issue track which link can be found in
http://wiki.netbeans.org/Scala
-Caoy
On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 7:13 PM, Jon Hancock wrote:
> I thought eclipse would be the best supported. But so far, I'm still
> wrestling with it.
Which in particular is blocking you? Pointers to the issues in Trac
would be helpful and might save me and David a little time next week
:-)
Cheers,
On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 4:30 PM, Paulo Cheque wrote:
> It would be amazing to use Scala with JUnitMax plugin in Eclipse.
> Untill now, JUnitMax support only Java, but I believe this is not hard
> to change. I believe that if Kent Beck has more time he will implement
> that.
I'd give it a try: the
On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 4:19 PM, David Pollak
wrote:
> I'm meeting with Miles Sabin in London next week to work with him on
> hardening the Eclipse plugin for Lift-related use.
Umm ... I think the concept of "hardening" the plugin left the theatre
along with Sean ;-)
Let's call a spade a spade:
Paulo,
I'm also playing with similar issues.
I thought eclipse would be the best supported. But so far, I'm still
wrestling with it.
If those on this list say NetBeans is solid, I'll give that a try.
What I'm looking for:
- IDE taking advantage of scala's types for factoring, docs,
autocompleti
It would be amazing to use Scala with JUnitMax plugin in Eclipse.
Untill now, JUnitMax support only Java, but I believe this is not hard
to change. I believe that if Kent Beck has more time he will implement
that.
But I will try NetBeans!
Thanks
[]s
Paulo
On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 1:27 PM, Kris
Please, I'm not criticizing! ok? Thanks by all good work!
If I had to use a IDE like textmate + console I would prefer to use a
dinamically typed language =(
I will try NetBeans.
Basically the issues of Scala plugin are the basics... auto-complete,
refactoring, errors/warnings alerts... all this
Oh, and one more thing about NetBeans - if you, like me, have vi hardwired
into your nervous system, the jvi plugin (http://jvi.sourceforge.net) for
NetBeans is a HUGE win. A fully featured vi in the editor window + NetBeans
autocomplete, refactoring support, etc is bliss.
Kris
On Wed, Mar 4, 200
NetBeans works well for me. I've always found that NetBeans's Maven
integration is superior to that for Eclipse, and the fact that the Scala
plugin interoperates smoothly with the Maven integration is a big plus for
me. The Scala autocomplete functionality and automatic syntax checking in
NetBeans
Paulo,
Lots of people use netbeans and eclipse. Im sure if you have issues
with the eclipse plugin its maintainers would love bug reports :-)
Otherwise, I know a lot of use (myself included) just use TextMate
with a compiler open in a terminal window which works great.
Hope that helps
Tim
On M
On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 8:14 AM, Paulo Cheque wrote:
>
> What IDE do you use to develop lift applications? Eclipse? NetBeans?
> I want to use Scala regurlarly, but Eclipse plugin is too bugged...
I use NetBeans.
Some folks have had good experiences with IntelliJ.
I'm meeting with Miles Sabin i
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