On May 24, 2007, at 10:14 AM, Fabian Peters wrote:
> Hi Johan,
>
> Am 24.05.2007 um 19:00 schrieb Johan Henselmans:
>
>>
>> I am seriously confused, dazed by this more is more attitude of
>> Eclipse. I have read the woproject mailing list now from september
>> last year until march, and will finish this evening. I have looked
>> at the wiki's, and sometimes discover some interesting stuff.
>>
>> I somehow managed to find my way into importing projects, and
>> deleting them again, creating different workspaces, and compiling
>> stuff. There are still many confusing parts, however.
>>
>> For instance: I have imported the latest Wonder, by importing over
>> Wonder/Common, then Wonder/Ajax then Wonder/Plugins and Wonder/
>> Validity.
>>
>> After that everything started to compile, and I got some error
>> messages. But all the logging ends up in one window (Console),
>> with another window.
>>
>> I always only find logging that I don't want. For instance, if I
>> have a project running, and I am trying to install another
>> project, I see some blue lines passing by that describe that the
>> install failed of course, but before I can look what permissions
>> should be fixed before I give up and run as root, the logging of
>> the running project is back in place (in red lines).
>>
>> How can I look at the logging that disappeared?
>
> Click on this icon in the console view:
> <pastedGraphic.png>
>
>
>> Another mystery for me is how one knows which file from which
>> project one is editing. I know, you should only Program Once, so
>> there should only be one Session.java that should for once and all
>> take care of every situation, but I am from the Paste Many
>> generation, and so I sometimes have three or four Session.java
>> files open at the same time. In XCode you could just see which
>> project the file belonged to because every project had it's own
>> project window, and if it was a separate window with the java
>> code, you could apple-click on the file name in the top-bar to see
>> what the path was.
>>
>> What do you use to find out what that is?
>
> I'd say the easiest is to have your various sessions in packages, à
> la com.henselmans.myproject.Session. Then you'll see the package of
> the current class being displayed in the first line of the outline
> view.
Or use the Link with Editor button in Package Explorer. Or hover
over the tab in the editor. Or....
Chuck
>
> HTH
>
> Fabian
>
>
>> I noticed that one of the WOWODC sessions is about migrating from
>> XCode to Eclipse. I did not know about the conference until it was
>> too late, unfortunately. But I am more than willing to play the
>> stupid sorcerers pupil during the sessions and see with how many
>> broom sticks I can come up, before Chuck, Mike, Anjo and Uli the
>> sorcerers save the day.
>>
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> Johan Henselmans
>>
>
--Practical WebObjects - for developers who want to increase their overall knowledge of WebObjects or who are trying to solve specific problems. http://www.global-village.net/products/practical_webobjects
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