I'm using Jetty directly (without Maven, though we do use maven for
project management), and hotswap works great then.
Eelco
On Tue, Mar 10, 2009 at 4:47 AM, francisco treacy
wrote:
> i would like to add an ingredient here: scala.
>
> is there anyone successfully using an IDE with wicket/maven/
i would like to add an ingredient here: scala.
is there anyone successfully using an IDE with wicket/maven/scala
*and* jetty hotswap?
i have always developed wicket/java in eclipse (dead easy to set up -
create quickstart archetype, right click debug Start.java and off you
go). but scala plugin f
It's been a year or two since I tried it... but I couldn't stand it
unfortunately (m4eclipse was going through some serious issues at the
time).
Glad to see that its improved enough to use!
- Brill
On 27-Feb-09, at 6:14 AM, Sergio García wrote:
I'm using Q4E, and although it has some fla
I think when/if Eclipse supports nested projects, that might help.
Eclipse.org appears to be working on it for version 4. See:
https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=35973
I have also ran into problems with m2eclipse, however I have kept it
installed for use with small projects and for the
Replying inline
2009/2/27 Emond Papegaaij
> Some of the benefits are:
> - You can edit the pom and the results are immediately visible (like when
> editing java code).
Okay I see some benefit from this...
>
> - Working with snapshots is much easier. You just checkout the project and
> m2ecli
I'm using Q4E, and although it has some flaws, it works very good with maven
Brill Pappin wrote:
>
> What are you using instead?
>
> - Brill
>
> On 24-Feb-09, at 12:45 PM, James Carman wrote:
>
>> +1! We had an awful lot of trouble getting it to work for us.
>>
>> On Tue, Feb 24, 2009 at 12:
Some of the benefits are:
- You can edit the pom and the results are immediately visible (like when
editing java code).
- Working with snapshots is much easier. You just checkout the project and
m2eclipse removes the jar dependency and adds a project dependency. This saves
you from performing
Sure, if you change project structure, you need to invoke mvn
eclipse:eclipse one projects that are changed.. But it works... And true
it's not integrated in eclipse..
I just dont see what the integrations bring, but It might just be because I
too have been unlucky, when I tried m2eclipse...
The
Yes, mvn eclipse:eclipse works, but it's not really integrating maven in
eclipse. I have to run it manually after changing the pom or the project
structure and it often results in a complete rebuild of all projects.
On Friday 27 February 2009 10:08:58 nino martinez wael wrote:
> I just use mvn e
I just use mvn eclipse:eclipse , it works every time :)
2009/2/27 Emond Papegaaij
> That is the plugin Martijn is talking about, and I am one of the co-workers
> he
> mentioned. I tried the m2eclipse plugin and used it for a day. The plugin
> (version 0.9.7.200902090947) was able to checkout the
That is the plugin Martijn is talking about, and I am one of the co-workers he
mentioned. I tried the m2eclipse plugin and used it for a day. The plugin
(version 0.9.7.200902090947) was able to checkout the project from svn and
create eclipse projects for all modules, so far so good, although th
you can mix Ant and Maven easily with the antrun plugin.
another option is to use the inline maven goal for the war plugin
which I think will allow you to edit the HTML in place.
Your issue it certainly not a new one... most of the very good
designers i know don't even want to know how to run
What are you using instead?
- Brill
On 24-Feb-09, at 12:45 PM, James Carman wrote:
+1! We had an awful lot of trouble getting it to work for us.
On Tue, Feb 24, 2009 at 12:38 PM, Martijn Dashorst
wrote:
m2eclipse is absolutely worthless for anything beyond a quickstart.
It
is constantly r
I don't think we're talking about the same plugin then (although you
seem to be calling it the same thing)...
I'm referring to:
http://m2eclipse.codehaus.org/
It's the *only* one I've found that *actually works* properly,
particularly for larger projects... although I run the dev version
Even NetBeans is not that straitforward, but it is less problematic
than eclipse IMHO.
There are ways to acomplish what you ask. NetBeans will copy content
under 'webapp/WEB-INF' to 'target' on changes, but not under 'java'.
Bad NetBeans Bad.
I will give it a shot in a couple of days and let you kn
If you run the Start.java file included in a quickstart under **debug mode**
in Eclipse it starts up a Jetty server for you and **recognizes changes
immediately** in both class files and html files.
Just running the app in development mode under any container should make
html changes appear immedi
I deal directly with HTML coders and I want to bring to them an easy
of use project build / run. I don't want to be called every time a new
HTML join to the project team because he doesn't have the setup of the
project. I think that maven help me a lot with it but I'm a little bit
afraid of the bui
The nice thing about wicket is that you don't need tools. It's just Java and
just HTML, so anything will do. "discover the simplicity" would be the
slogan ;-) (Cue video of good looking people enjoying the simple pleasures
of life)
Thomas
On Mon, Feb 23, 2009 at 8:19 PM, Eduardo Nunes wrote:
>
I didn't think IDEA users would fall for such an obvious trap.
On Tue, Feb 24, 2009 at 10:21 AM, PY wrote:
>
> +1 for IDEA.
> The wicket plugin is really simple but allow to match up markup id from
> HTML
> to Java code.
> Netbeans is cool too.
>
>
> Maarten Bosteels wrote:
> >
> > IDEA users, d
+1 for IDEA.
The wicket plugin is really simple but allow to match up markup id from HTML
to Java code.
Netbeans is cool too.
Maarten Bosteels wrote:
>
> IDEA users, don't be shy ! ;-)
>
> Probably nobody dared to mention it because it's not free.
> But guess what. It is free for Open Source d
IDEA users, don't be shy ! ;-)
Probably nobody dared to mention it because it's not free.
But guess what. It is free for Open Source development (and a personal
license costs only 225 euro)
I think IDEA is really fantastic.
It has great maven support out-of-the-box, it will also download sources
On Tue, Feb 24, 2009 at 12:55 PM, Brill Pappin wrote:
> If your on Netbeans, I think Maven will generate Netbeans project files for
> you as well (it will do so for eclipse), so you could actually flip back and
> forth if you wanted.
Netbeans does NOT need any other project files. It just need th
The codehaus eclipse plugin has worked quite ok for us, but we didn't
dare to upgrade from Eclipse 3.1 ;) It didn't seem to work in others.
**
Martin
2009/2/24 James Carman :
> +1! We had an awful lot of trouble getting it to work for us.
>
> On Tue, Feb 24, 2009 at 12:38 PM, Martijn Dashorst
>
+1! We had an awful lot of trouble getting it to work for us.
On Tue, Feb 24, 2009 at 12:38 PM, Martijn Dashorst
wrote:
> m2eclipse is absolutely worthless for anything beyond a quickstart. It
> is constantly reparsing poms, grinding eclipse to a halt. It failed to
> generate the right project d
m2eclipse is absolutely worthless for anything beyond a quickstart. It
is constantly reparsing poms, grinding eclipse to a halt. It failed to
generate the right project dependencies for our multimodule project
that consists of 2 multimodule child projects. It failed miserably to
uninstall, needing
Oh nice...
I was just thinking that it would be nice to have a plugin that would
rename the html files when i renamed the class... I hadn't tried
Wicket Bench yet...
Guess what I'm doing today?
- Brill
On 23-Feb-09, at 5:40 PM, Vit Rozkovec wrote:
But in the eclipse version 3.4 when renam
I should add something about the Eclipse maven plugins... don't go for
the official eclipse Q4 plugin... use the "Maven Integration 4
Eclipse" plugin (and actually the development version if your jiggy
with it, it works and gets updated/fixed way more often).
If your on Netbeans, I think Ma
I am a NetBeans user, and I have been for a long time. The maven
integration in NetBeans is excelent.
Works with profiles, downloads sources and javadoc, quickstart is
right there when creating a new project, code-completes the pom.xml
including dependency names and keywords (like "compile" or "run
But in the eclipse version 3.4 when renaming java file, WicketBench
stopped renaming for me html and css files with the same name as the
java file, which is a bit pity.
Vitek
Pierre Goupil wrote:
+1, I like Wicket Bench. And with M2Eclipse, you have the full sources &
JavaDoc just by adding W
+1, I like Wicket Bench. And with M2Eclipse, you have the full sources &
JavaDoc just by adding Wicket as a dependency, which is very convenient. But
don't expect Wicket Bench to do too much, it's just a small, useful tool.
Pierre
> Hi, I use Eclipse with Wicket Bench plugin and it works very fi
Hi, I use Eclipse with Wicket Bench plugin and it works very fine.
On Mon, Feb 23, 2009 at 9:57 PM, Jeremy Thomerson wrote:
> This is my choice, too, but the most concrete reason I have is "I like it"
> and "it works well *for me*". Find one that fits those criteria for you,
> and you'll be hap
This is my choice, too, but the most concrete reason I have is "I like it"
and "it works well *for me*". Find one that fits those criteria for you,
and you'll be happy :)
On Mon, Feb 23, 2009 at 2:48 PM, Brill Pappin wrote:
> your choices are pretty limited based on criteria... however I'm an E
your choices are pretty limited based on criteria... however I'm an
Eclipse fan.
I use Eclipse with maven2...
- Brill
On 23-Feb-09, at 2:19 PM, Eduardo Nunes wrote:
Hello guys,
I don't want to generate a flame war but I want to know your opinion
about what IDE best fits with Wicket?
The b
There is a Wicket plugin in the Netbeans plugins center, but I prefer to
configure it as a library. If you use Maven based projects, adding the
references to the pom should be enough I guess.
Hth,
Daniel
Eduardo Nunes wrote:
>
> Do you use some plug-in?
>
> I like netbeans too.
>
>
--
Do you use some plug-in?
I like netbeans too.
On Mon, Feb 23, 2009 at 4:55 PM, Jeremy Levy wrote:
> Eclipse or NetBeans.
>
> I like netbeans. Use what your most productive in..
>
>
>
> On Mon, Feb 23, 2009 at 2:19 PM, Eduardo Nunes wrote:
>
>> Hello guys,
>>
>> I don't want to generate a flame
Eclipse or NetBeans.
I like netbeans. Use what your most productive in..
On Mon, Feb 23, 2009 at 2:19 PM, Eduardo Nunes wrote:
> Hello guys,
>
> I don't want to generate a flame war but I want to know your opinion
> about what IDE best fits with Wicket?
>
> The basic requirements are: free a
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