I'd recommend asking all questions that relate to Gradle and NetBeans here in the form of issues:
https://github.com/kelemen/netbeans-gradle-project Gj On Sat, Nov 17, 2018 at 7:34 PM Blake McBride <[email protected]> wrote: > On Sat, Nov 17, 2018 at 11:44 AM Emilian Bold <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> NetBeans seems to be configured already with the sources (see screenshot). >> > > There are two ways of dealing with the project setup: > > 1. A NetBeans project > 2. A Gradle project > > The code on Github is using a NetBeans project and I am able to set the > dual source tree, and it works. However, it does not honer breakpoint in > Groovy for some reason. > > I tried moving to a Gradle-based project to try to remain IDE nutural. > That's where I was unable to specify the source roots to the editor. When > you have a Gradle-based project, you don't get to specify where the source > roots are through a NetBeans dialog. Perhaps it is expecting something > from the build.gradle file. I don't know. > > In either case, however, NetBeans does no honor breakpoint in dynamically > loaded Groovy code - but does in dynamically loaded Java code. (IntelliJ > works in all cases.) > > >> On my machine the problem seems to be there are some missing JARS in lib/ >> : >> > > You can get the JARS with: > > 1. gradle war > 2. gradle clean > 3. gradle copyToLibs > 4. git checkout libs > > Thanks! > > Blake > > > >> >> > Warning: Could not find file >> /Users/apache/CoolBeansProjects/Kiss/libs/log4j-1.2.17.jar to copy. >> >> --emi >> On Sat, Nov 17, 2018 at 7:11 PM Blake McBride <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> > >> > Hi, and thanks for the response. >> > >> > This is a Gradle / tomcat / Java / Groovy app. The project is at >> https://github.com/kiss-web/Kiss >> > >> > I developed it with IntelliJ and it works well. I'm trying to port it >> over to NetBeans to allow free development. Under NetBeans, breakpoints in >> Groovy don't work, and I am having trouble with the two source roots. >> > >> > The stuff on GitHub uses NetBeans project-based approach. I'm trying >> to scratch that and depend more on Gradle. Not having an easy time. >> > >> > Any ideas on how I can tell the NetBeans editor that there are two >> source roots? >> > >> > Thanks! >> > >> > Blake McBride >> > >> > >> > >> > On Fri, Nov 16, 2018 at 11:54 PM Emilian Bold <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> >> >> >> You didn't mention what kind of project you are using. The Sources >> >> window you have in the screenshot is for the Debugger so it doesn't >> >> configure the editor in any way. >> >> >> >> The Ant-based 'Java Project with Existing Sources' works for me (just >> >> tested). You can probably also configure a Maven project for this >> >> situation. >> >> >> >> --emi >> >> On Sat, Nov 17, 2018 at 5:29 AM Blake McBride <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> >> > >> >> > Greetings, >> >> > >> >> > I am using NetBeans 8.2 on a 64 bit Linux box with Java 8. My app >> has two source roots with no package name collisions. I combine them as if >> they were under the same tree. The problem I have is that the IDE tags the >> imports as errors as if it didn't know where the other source root is. >> >> > >> >> > I am attaching a picture of the problem. I have >> application/services/MyJavaService.java attempting to import >> java/org/kissweb/database/Connection.java - which exists but the IDE flags >> it as unknown. >> >> > >> >> > How can I fix this? >> >> > >> >> > Thanks! >> >> > >> >> > Blake McBride >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> >> > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] >> >> > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] >> >> > >> >> > For further information about the NetBeans mailing lists, visit: >> >> > https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/NETBEANS/Mailing+lists >> >
