How to completely disable Oomph in Eclipse? - java

For a long time it was annoying in Eclipse to switch workspaces and also to lose (not permanently of course) carefully crafted settings like colors, styles, etc. And it was again annoying to recreate these settings from scratch (thus creating a new workspace was as rare as possible). And I was extremely happy to see someone decided to do something about it, so we get Oomph. But longer I use it, more I think that the solution is actually worse than the original problem. First of all, it just doesn't work as one would expect. So I said to myself: "OK, give it a time, be patient, maybe you just don't know how to properly use it" (and probably I still can't). But after few years I end up with dozens of different versions of Eclipse installed around, because of this Oomph thing. And now (Oxygen.3a) it is tied to Eclipse and apparently I can't remove it.
But why would I do that? Because I'm loosing control over the settings! It changes syntax color at its whim, ignores indeterminably part of these settings (Java Editor Syntax Color) and other settings too. Oh, I tried to disable recording or startup task, but to no avail. Can't I just have these colors as picked? Actually I promise, I would not complain about setting these things from scratch in each workspace again, but please, let someone tell me, how to get rid of Oomph functionality. PLEASE.
I guess there should be separate settings for Eclipse "style" and these should shared among Eclipse versions and instances (like via ~/.config/eclipse/ or what) and "environment" settings that are strictly involved in building/running the code that are tight to workspaces. I believe it would be way simpler to maintain the stuff. But at this point I just would like to know, how to disable Oomph to return to the old, well known hell. Is that even possible?

Everytime when I change pref in eclipse to ignore unnecessaryElse
org.eclipse.jdt.core.compiler.problem.unnecessaryElse = ignore
When I close eclipse, and restart it again. The above pref will be changed automatically to the following
org.eclipse.jdt.core.compiler.problem.unnecessaryElse = warning
Finally, I found that oomph alway Executing startup tasks to restore or change my pref settings. This is unacceptable.
At last, I add -Doomph.setup.skip=true to eclipse/eclipse.ini, and now oomph nolonger restore or change my pref settings.
-Doomph.setup.skip=true

Related

Remove unnecessary Java casting in Eclipse/STS does not work?

I am using STS 3.1.0 IDE and would like to write some basic Java test programs to practice object up/downcasting principles
I noticed that the IDE is automatically removing unnecessary castings, which I don't want at this point for practicing purposes, so I figured out that it should be possible to deactivate this feature, like e.g. described in this thread: Remove redundant casts in Java
I made a copy from the "Eclipse [built-in]" clean-up profile which was used by the IDE by default, unticked the "Remove unnecessary casts" checkbox, and set this copied profile active for the particular Java project. Nonetheless the IDE still keeps removing the casts. IDE restart/logout/computer restart do not seem to help either
Maybe it is some very basic issue, but I ran out of ideas so thought to post it in here. Any help is appreciated
Seems to have found the answer. Apparently it is not only possible to define the handling of unnecessary casts under Properties -> Java code Style -> Clean Up, but also under Properties -> Java Editor -> Save Actions. After I unticked the concerning checkbox here as well, the castings were not removed any more

How I can find all unused import programmatically?

In my case there are two reason for doing that:
Sometimes people by mistake import classes which present in macbooks JDKs but absent in Linux. That causes build to fail on ci servers which are Linux based boxes. I doesn’t happen frequently, but when it does happened I'm thinking that there should be some smarter way to find out that earlier.
Unused imports trigger warning in IDE/code analysis. From time to time somebody need to spend time on cleaning up this stuff. Even if its just single right click in IDE you still need to commit your changes and make sure everything alright on build.
I'm curious if there is any way to find unused imports programmatically (lets say from unit test) and fail locally if there are any.
Maybe failing a build because of unused import sounds harsh, but if it saves time for team overall it makes sens to do so (would love to hear opinion on that as well).
UPDATE:
I followed yegor256 suggestion and incorporated Checkstyle task with initially small subset of Sun Code Conventions (unused imports is one of them) and made it break a build if violations found.
After one week of trial we've got zero unused imports in our codebase and surprisingly zero complaints about this rule (by the way, Checkstyle is really fast: analyzing ~100KLoc taking less than one second).
As for using IDE for such analysis: yes, it good choice, but having this kind of checks run as part of automated build is better.
What you're trying to do is called static code analysis. Checkstyle can help you. If you're using Maven, this plugin will do the automation for you: http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-checkstyle-plugin/
You can also take a look at qulice.com (I'm one of its developers), which integrates a few static analysis tools and pre-configures them (incl. Checkstyle, PMD, FindBugs).
If you are using eclipse IDE or IntelliJ IDEA, you can configure them to
1a. organize imports / remove unused imports on save or before commit (see cleanup preferences)
1b. switch the "unused imports" warning to an error (see error settings)
2a. configure a jre which does not include com.* stuff
2b. configure the warning of proprietary api usage from the jre to be an error
You might still want to check that on the build server, though. In this case the more complicated stuff like configuring CheckStyle would still be necessary.
I'm curious if there is any way to find unused imports programmatically (lets say from unit test) and fail build locally if there are any.
I use IntelliJ to organise imports, this removes all the unused imports. You can do this with one hot key from the top of you code base to correct all the imports. (It also has over 700 other types of static checks and fixes)
Maybe failing a build because of unused import sounds harsh, but if it saves time for team overall it makes sens to do so (would love to hear opinion on that as well).
I have IntelliJ check in code which formatted and with imports organised so the issue never arises in the first place. ;)
In Computer Science the name given to such a process of analyzing the code without executing is known as static code analysis.
Try using an IDE, I am using Eclipse, which marks all the Unused imports and Unused Variables or methods in with a Yellow color underline....
Aren't these unrelated questions? If you import classes only present in the local JDK, these imports are used (just unsatisfied). For either problem, I recommend solving it in the IDE so the problem will be detected when code is written, rather than prior to checkin (the earlier the detection, the easier the fix ...).
In eclipse, you could prevent unsatisfied imports with access rules, and automatically fix imports whenever a source file is saved by enabling the appropriate save action. If you check these settings into version control, you can easily share them with the team.
I see lot of comments in same way that use this IDE or that IDE. But all my friends try to understand the difference. Doing something programmatically is different and using IDE is different.
If I want a process to be programmatic then suggestion of IDE is not useful. It might be possible some one is asking this question because he is building complete process and this step is part of it. How opening IDE would help him on different machines and OS where CI is working?
I too building one tool on similar lines. I achieved it up to some level but it programmatically open IDE and close it automatically and fixes source code too. But opening same in Linux might be a question for me.
Understanding some one's view before answering is really very important.

Running a program in Debug mode is incredible slow

Since recently it's much slower running a program in Debug mode in Eclipse Galileo.
I'm not aware of any changes.
Do you know what could be the cause? Running it normally is not a problem.
Another "debugging break" is the use of method entry/exit breakpoints.
Did you try to remove all breakpoint definitions once?
Sometimes i think Eclipse is getting out of synch with some of its internal/displayed state. Perhaps you should try to setup a new (not copy) of your workspace. This sometimes helps me to recover from spurious features.
This is how you can remove all breakPoints
Eclipse -> Run -> Remove All Breakpoints - for removing all Breakpoints for all Time
Eclipse -> Run -> Skip All Breakpoints - for temporary remove breakpoints
I faced this issue lot of time. Solution is simple, Remove all breakpoints.
(Run >> Remove All Breakpoints)
I was just running a program in Eclipse debug mode that was almost instant without debugging but when I ran it in debug mode, it was really slow. I went through and deleted a ton of random useless breakpoints I wasn't using and then the program sped up A LOT (200x or so).
Disable 'Show method result after a step operation'.
I have found that i often forget that i have a bunch of expressions added to the expressions panel that are no longer needed that are none the less being evaluated (or are failing to evaluate) and this slows stuff down a good deal. Make sure that you keep those expressions cleared out when not needed.
Close eclipse... clear %temp% folder, temp folder... disable breakpoints... in most cases this will definitely solve the problem.
What kind of JVM are you attaching to? I found in my experience, that in debug mode IBM JDK is slow like hell.
For all JVMs, check if you have conditional breakpoints with expensive condition. Try disable breakpoints. You may have exception breakpoints or expressions. Try disable or remove them.
In my case, Eclipse was trying to build files, which I was doing manually.
Going to Window -> Preferences -> Run/Debug -> Launching, and then disabling "Build (if required) before Launching" underneath General Options solved the slowness.
Clearing temp files on Windows fixed it for me
"C:\\Documents and Settings\\{user}\\Local Settings\\Temp"
Normally Java Virtual Machine turns off Just in time compiler (JIT) when running in debug mode. On IBM WebSphere, the IBM JDK is heavy de-optimized and will be very slow.
By the way debugging also make impossible to recompile and optimize the code.
Relay on logging for complex debugging: it will save your days on production, where you cannot debug for sure.
With all the learning over the years working with eclipse, here are couple of suggestions
keep your open projects to minimal what you actually need
keep it lean and thin - uninstall the plugins/features which you don't use (mylnn, validations etc).
No matter what you do, the eclipse tend to get slower over the time. The ultimate solution to get a responsive IDE is to recycle your existing workspace (create new workspace and bring in the projects which you need).
Before you run your application in debug mode press on (disable all breakpoints) and you wont experience slow loading or any problems. After your application has started just enable the breakpoints and then you can debug your code.
I faced this issue recently after upgrading my macOS version.
I wasn't able to fix the slow debugger with all the above solutions, I ended up installing a newer version of eclipse, and everything works prefect after that.
It happened to me once and the problem was, I had the folder with ALL my projects source code in the Source Look-up. This way, not only the debugger got really slow (because it probably crawled all my files) but also I could not do a lot of things such as inline execution.
The takeaway: check your Source Look-up. When debugging right-click in any thread from the Debug view, choose Edit Source Look-up and see what what you can/should remove from there. In my case, it was a spurious folder, other times you may have too many projects, folders, JARs etc. and may remove some.
Recently i was having extreme slow performance debug, both in eclipse and visual studio code (vs code)
In my case, the problem was with lombok configuration in JPA entities.
I changed the #Data anottation to #Getters and #Setters.
Looks like hashCode() and equals() implementantion of lombok was in conflict with JPA.
I've had the same problem. The work around i'm using is to just set a single break point and run to it. After that I don't try to step over or continue i just restart the test and move my break point to the next line I want to view. I am using JUnit with Mockito in Intellij. I'm guessing it has something to do with the byte code manipulation not matching the actual code in intellij. (In intellij, there is an implementation internal to intellij for running JUnit tests. Mockito may not play will with it)

How to disable AspectJ without restarting the program?

I have an application using AspectJ with load time weaving to advise various methods. I would like to put a switch in my program to disable the aspect without having to make any source code changes or having to restart the program. It needs to incur as little overhead as possible while turned off. Thanks!
To my knowledge, there is no way to unweave some advice from bytecode. If you're working with an existing piece of augmented bytecode, I don't believe there's any way to remove it other than restarting the application without the weaving*.
If you're talking about setting things up so they can be removed - it may be true that the weaving can't be removed, but you could certainly add a global if (useWeavedCode) check around all of it, and of course add that variable as well as methods to modify it in an appropriate way (expose via JMX, new console command, new admin JSP page, etc.). Then if you want to prevent this new behaviour, you can disable it with this new option.
Note of course that this doesn't actually remove the code, and incurs the cost of a boolean
parameter lookup while it's disabled, but I don't think it's possible to do better than that.
*Strictly you need to get the class loaded again, so you don't need to restart the app, but in practice this is likely the most straightforward option available to you unless you've previously put hooks into the classloaders.

Things possible in IntelliJ that aren't possible in Eclipse?

Locked. This question and its answers are locked because the question is off-topic but has historical significance. It is not currently accepting new answers or interactions.
I have heard from people who have switched either way and who swear by the one or the other.
Being a huge Eclipse fan but having not had the time to try out IntelliJ, I am interested in hearing from IntelliJ users who are "ex-Eclipsians" some specific things that you can do with IntelliJ that you can not do with Eclipse.
Note: This is not a subjective question nor at all meant to turn into an IDE holy war. Please downvote any flamebait answers.
CTRL-click works anywhere
CTRL-click that brings you to where clicked object is defined works everywhere - not only in Java classes and variables in Java code, but in Spring configuration (you can click on class name, or property, or bean name), in Hibernate (you can click on property name or class, or included resource), you can navigate within one click from Java class to where it is used as Spring or Hibernate bean; clicking on included JSP or JSTL tag also works, ctrl-click on JavaScript variable or function brings you to the place it is defined or shows a menu if there are more than one place, including other .js files and JS code in HTML or JSP files.
Autocomplete for many languagues
Hibernate
Autocomplete in HSQL expressions, in Hibernate configuration (including class, property and DB column names), in Spring configuration
<property name="propName" ref="<hit CTRL-SPACE>"
and it will show you list of those beans which you can inject into that property.
Java
Very smart autocomplete in Java code:
interface Person {
String getName();
String getAddress();
int getAge();
}
//---
Person p;
String name = p.<CTRL-SHIFT-SPACE>
and it shows you ONLY getName(), getAddress() and toString() (only they are compatible by type) and getName() is first in the list because it has more relevant name. Latest version 8 which is still in EAP has even more smart autocomplete.
interface Country{
}
interface Address {
String getStreetAddress();
String getZipCode();
Country getCountry();
}
interface Person {
String getName();
Address getAddress();
int getAge();
}
//---
Person p;
Country c = p.<CTRL-SHIFT-SPACE>
and it will silently autocomplete it to
Country c = p.getAddress().getCountry();
Javascript
Smart autocomplete in JavaScript.
function Person(name,address) {
this.getName = function() { return name };
this.getAddress = function() { return address };
}
Person.prototype.hello = function() {
return "I'm " + this.getName() + " from " + this.get<CTRL-SPACE>;
}
and it shows ONLY getName() and getAddress(), no matter how may get* methods you have in other JS objects in your project, and ctrl-click on this.getName() brings you to where this one is defined, even if there are some other getName() functions in your project.
HTML
Did I mention autocomplete and ctrl-clicking in paths to files, like <script src="", <img src="", etc?
Autocomplete in HTML tag attributes. Autocomplete in style attribute of HTML tags, both attribute names and values. Autocomplete in class attributes as well.
Type <div class="<CTRL-SPACE> and it will show you list of CSS classes defined in your project. Pick one, ctrl-click on it and you will be redirected to where it is defined.
Easy own language higlighting
Latest version has language injection, so you can declare that you custom JSTL tag usually contains JavaScript and it will highlight JavaScript inside it.
<ui:obfuscateJavaScript>function something(){...}</ui:obfuscateJavaScript>
Indexed search across all project.
You can use Find Usages of any Java class or method and it will find where it is used including not only Java classes but Hibernate, Spring, JSP and other places. Rename Method refactoring renames method not only in Java classes but anywhere including comments (it can not be sure if string in comments is really method name so it will ask). And it will find only your method even if there are methods of another class with same name.
Good source control integration (does SVN support changelists? IDEA support them for every source control), ability to create a patch with your changes so you can send your changes to other team member without committing them.
Improved debugger
When I look at HashMap in debugger's watch window, I see logical view - keys and values, last time I did it in Eclipse it was showing entries with hash and next fields - I'm not really debugging HashMap, I just want to look at it contents.
Spring & Hibernate configuration validation
It validates Spring and Hibernate configuration right when you edit it, so I do not need to restart server to know that I misspelled class name, or added constructor parameter so my Spring cfg is invalid.
Last time I tried, I could not run Eclipse on Windows XP x64.
and it will suggest you person.name or person.address.
Ctrl-click on person.name and it will navigate you to getName() method of Person class.
Type Pattern.compile(""); put \\ there, hit CTRL-SPACE and see helpful hint about what you can put into your regular expression. You can also use language injection here - define your own method that takes string parameter, declare in IntelliLang options dialog that your parameter is regular expression - and it will give you autocomplete there as well. Needless to say it highlights incorrect regular expressions.
Other features
There are few features which I'm not sure are present in Eclipse or not. But at least each member of our team who uses Eclipse, also uses some merging tool to merge local changes with changes from source control, usually WinMerge. I never need it - merging in IDEA is enough for me. By 3 clicks I can see list of file versions in source control, by 3 more clicks I can compare previous versions, or previous and current one and possibly merge.
It allows to to specify that I need all .jars inside WEB-INF\lib folder, without picking each file separately, so when someone commits new .jar into that folder it picks it up automatically.
Mentioned above is probably 10% of what it does. I do not use Maven, Flex, Swing, EJB and a lot of other stuff, so I can not tell how it helps with them. But it does.
There is only one reason I use intellij and not eclipse: Usability
Whether it is debugging, refactoring, auto-completion.. Intellij is much easier to use with consistent key bindings, options available where you look for them etc. Feature-wise, it will be tough for intellij to catch up with Eclipse, as the latter has much more plugins available that intellij, and is easily extensible.
Probably is not a matter of what can/can't be done, but how.
For instance both have editor surrounded with dock panels for project, classpath, output, structure etc. But in Idea when I start to type all these collapse automatically let me focus on the code it self; In eclipse all these panels keep open leaving my editor area very reduced, about 1/5 of the total viewable area. So I have to grab the mouse and click to minimize in those panels. Doing this all day long is a very frustrating experience in eclipse.
The exact opposite thing happens with the view output window. In Idea running a program brings the output window/panel to see the output of the program even if it was perviously minimized. In eclipse I have to grab my mouse again and look for the output tab and click it to view my program output, because the output window/panel is just another one, like all the rest of the windows, but in Idea it is treated in a special way: "If the user want to run his program, is very likely he wants to see the output of that program!" It seems so natural when I write it, but eclipse fails in this basic user interface concept.
Probably there's a shortcut for this in eclipse ( autohide output window while editing and autoshow it when running the program ) , but as some other tens of features the shortcut must be hunted in forums, online help etc while in Idea is a little bit more "natural".
This can be repeated for almost all the features both have, autocomplete, word wrap, quick documentation view, everything. I think the user experience is far more pleasant in Idea than in eclipse. Then the motto comes true "Develop with pleasure"
Eclipse handles faster larger projects ( +300 jars and +4000 classes ) and I think IntelliJ Idea 8 is working on this.
All this of course is subjective. How can we measure user experience?
Idea 8.0 has the lovely ctrl+shift+space x 2 that does the following autocomplete:
City city = customer.<ctrl-shift-space twice>
resolves to
City city = customer.getAddress().getCity();
through any number of levels of getters/setters.
Don't forget "compare with clipboard".
Something that I use all the time in IntelliJ and which has no equivalent in Eclipse.
My favorite shortcut in IntelliJ that has no equivalent in Eclipse (that I've found) is called 'Go to symbol'. CTRL-ALT-SHIFT-N lets you start typing and glob up classes, method names, variable names, etc, from the entire project.
I tried to switch to IntelliJ because of the new Android Studio. But I'm very disappointed now. I'm using Eclipse with the Code Recommanders Plugin. Here is a simple example why Eclipse is so awesome:
I want to create a new SimpleTimeZone. SimpleTimeZone has no Constructor with zero arguments.
Ctrl + Space in Eclipse
Ctrl + Space in IntelliJ
In IntelliJ I get no informations what kind of constructors SimpleTimeZone has.
After Enter in Eclipse
I get the previously selected constructor filled with predefined variable names. And I can see the type of every argument. With Code Recommanders Eclipse guesses the right constructor by the previously defined variable types in the current scope and fills the constructor with these vars.
After Enter in IntelliJ nothing happens. I get an empty constructor. I have to press Ctrl + P to see the expected arguments.
If you have the cursor on a method then CTRL+SHIFT+I will popup the method implementation. If the method is an interface method, then you can use up- and down- arrows to cycle through the implementations:
Map<String, Integer> m = ...
m.contains|Key("Wibble");
Where | is (for example) where your cursor is.
IntelliJ has some pretty advanced code inspections (comparable but different to FindBugs).
Although I seriously miss a FindBugs plugin when using IntelliJ (The Eclipse/FindBugs integration is pretty cool).
Here is an official list of CodeInspections supported by IntelliJ
EDIT: Finally, there is a findbugs-plugin for IntelliJ. It is still a bit beta but the combination of Code Inspections and FindBugs is just awesome!
Far, far, far more refactorings.
One thing I use regularly is setting a breakpoint, but then controlling what it does. (At my last job, most everyone else used Eclipse... I remember being surprised that no one could find how to do this in Eclipse.)
For example, can have the breakpoint not actually stop, but just log a message to the console. Which means, I don't have to litter my code with "System.out.println(...)" and then recompile.
There are many things that idea solves in a much simpler way, or there's no equivalent:
Autocomplete actions: Doing ctrl+shift+a you can call any idea action from the keyboard without remembering its key combination... Think about gnome-do or launchy in windows, and you've got the idea! Also, this feature supports CamelCasing abbreviations ;)
Shelf: Lets you keep easily some pieces of code apart, and then review them through the diff viewer.
Local history: It's far better managed, and simpler.
SVN annotations and history: simpler to inspect, and also you can easily see the history only for such a part of a whole source file.
Autocomplete everywhere, such as the evaluate expression and breakpoint condition windows.
Maven integration... much, much simpler, and well integrated.
Refactors much closer to the hand, such as loops insertion, wrapping/casting, renaming, and add variables.
Find much powerful and well organized. Even in big projects
Much stable to work with several branches of a big project at the same time (as a former bugfixer of 1.5Gb by branch sources, and the need to working in them simultaneously, idea shown its rock-solid capabilities)
Cleaner and simpler interface...
And, simpler to use only with the keyboard, letting apart the need of using the mouse for lots of simple taks, saving you time and giving you more focus on the code... where it matters!
And now, being opensource... the Idea user base will grow exponentially.
Structural search and replace.
For example, search for something like:
System.out.println($string$ + $expr$);
Where $string$ is a literal, and $expr$ is an expression of type my.package.and.Class, and then replace with:
$expr$.inspect($string$);
My timing may be a little off in terms of this thread, but I just had to respond.
I am a huge eclipse fan -- using it since it's first appearance. A friend told me then (10+ years ago) that it would be a player. He was right.
However! I have just started using IntelliJ and if you haven't seen or used changelists -- you are missing out on programming heaven.
The ability to track my changed files (on my development branch ala clearcase) was something I was looking for in a plugin for eclipse. Intellij tracks all of your changes for a single commit, extremely easy. You can isolate changed files with custom lists. I use that for configuration files that must be unique locally, but are constantly flagged when I sync or compare against the repository -- listing them under a changelist, I can monitor them, but neatly tuck them away so I can focus on the real additions I am making.
Also, there's a Commit Log plugin that outputs a text of all changes for those SCCS that aren't integrated with your bug tracking software. Pasting the log into a ticket's work history captures the files, their version, date/time, and the branch/tags. It's cool as hell.
All of this could be supported via plugins (or future enhancements) in eclipse, I wager; yet, Intellij makes this a breeze.
Finally, I am really excited about the mainstream love for this product -- the keystrokes, so it's painful, but fun.
The IntelliJ debugger has a very handy feature called "Evaluate Expression", that is by far better than eclipses pendant. It has full code-completion and i concider it to be generally "more useful".
Well, for me it's a thousand tiny things. Some of the macros, the GUI layout in general in Eclipse I find awful. I can't open multiple projects in different windows in Eclipse. I can open multiple projects, but then it's view based system swaps a bunch of things around on me when I switch files. IntelliJ's code inspections seem better. Its popup helpers to fix common issues is nice. Lots of simple usability things like the side bar where I can hover over a hot spot and it'll tell me every implementing subclass of a method or the method I'm implementing and from where.
Whenever I've had to use, or watch someone use, Eclipse it seems like they can do most of the things I can do in IntelliJ, but it takes them longer and it's clunkier.
Introduce variable. (Ctrl+Alt+V on Windows, Cmd+Alt+V on OSX)
Lets say you call a method, service.listAllPersons()
Hit Ctrl+Alt+V and Enter, and variable for return value from method call is inserted:
List<Person> list = service.listAllPersons();
Saves you typing, and you don't have to check the return type of the method you are calling. Especially useful when using generics, e.g.
new ArrayList<String>()
[introduce variable]
ArrayList<String> stringArrayList = new ArrayList<String>();
(of course you can easily change the name of the variable before hitting Enter)
IntelliJ has intellisense and refactoring support from code into jspx documents.
For me, it's IDEA's maven support, especially in version 9 is second to none. The on-the-fly synchronizing of the project to the maven model is just fantastic and makes development pleasant.
Intellij has a far superior SVN plug-in than either Subversive or Subclipse and it works! The amount of time we've wasted merging source files using Eclipse doesn't bear thinking about. This isn't an issue with IntelliJ because the plugin helps you much more.
Also the Subclipse plugin is unreliable - we regularly have instances where the plugin doesn't think there has been any code checked in to SVN by other developers, but there has - the CI server has processed them!
VIM Emulator. This plugin provides nearly complete vi/vim/gvim emulation while editing files in IDEA.
The following functionality is supported:
Motion keys
Deletion/Changing
Insert mode commands
Marks
Registers
VIM undo/redo
Visual mode commands
Some Ex commands
Some :set options
Full VIM regular expressions for search and search/replace
Macros
Diagraphs
Command line history
Search history
Jumplists
VIM help
some comments about this plugin from http://plugins.jetbrains.net/plugin/?id=164
I can't see ever going back to any other ide because of this plugin..
Best of both worlds... Awesome!.
that's what i was lacking in all IDEs.
One of the good points in my opinion is the Dependency Structure Matrix:
http://www.jetbrains.com/idea/features/dependency_analysis.html#link0
There's a good introduction to DSM usage and benefits in Lattix' website (a standalone product):
http://www.lattix.com/files/dl/slides/s.php?directory=4tour
A few other things:
propagate parameters/exceptions when
changing method signature, very
handy for updating methods deep
inside the call stack
SQL code validation in the strings passed as arguments to jdbc calls
(and the whole newly bundled
language injection stuff)
implemented in/overwritten in icons for interfaces & classes (and their methods) and
the smart implementation navigation
(Ctrl+Alt+Click or Ctrl+Alt+B)
linking between the EJB 2.1 interfaces and bean classes
(including refactoring support); old
one, but still immensely valuable
when working on older projects
Two things that IntelliJ does that Eclipse doesn't that are very valuable to me:
Method separators: those faint gray lines between methods make code much more readable
Text anti-aliasing: makes code look so nice in the IDE
One very useful feature is the ability to partially build a Maven reactor project so that only the parts you need are included.
To make this a little clearer, consider the case of a collection of WAR files with a lot of common resources (e.g. JavaScript, Spring config files etc) being shared between them using the overlay technique. If you are working on some web page (running in Jetty) and want to change some of the overlay code that is held in a separate module then you'd normally expect to have to stop Jetty, run the Maven build, start Jetty again and continue. This is the case with Eclipse and just about every other IDE I've worked with. Not so in IntelliJ. Using the project settings you can define which facet of which module you would like to be included in a background build. Consequently you end up with a process that appears seamless. You make a change to pretty much any code in the project and instantly it is available after you refresh the browser.
Very neat, and very fast.
I couldn't imagine coding a front end in something like YUI backing onto DWR/SpringMVC without it.
Preamble to my answer: My use of Eclipse is limited. We needed a Java IDE to work on both Windows and Mac and the Mac port slowed down day by day. This was years ago and I'm sure it's OK now. But that is what got us to switch to IntelliJ and we've been happy with it.
Now for my answer: One big difference I haven't seen mentioned yet is that tech support is better with IntelliJ/Jet Brains. We send an e-mail to JetBrains and get a definitive answer back in less than an hour. Looking for answers to Eclipse problems results in the usual, "You stupid idiot" answers (usually a small number of the replies) along with the much larger number of insightful, helpful replies. But it takes some sorting through to get the real answer.
Something which I use in IntelliJ all the time is refactoring as I type. I have re-written classes from a printout (originally written in eclipse) using both IDEs and I used about 40% less key strokes/mouse clicks to write the same classes in IntelliJ than eclipse.
I wouldn't want to use Eclipse until they support as much refactoring with incomplete pieces of code.
Here is a longer list of features in IntelliJ 8.0/8.1 [http://www.jetbrains.com/idea/features/index.html]
There is one thing that IntelliJ does much much better than Eclipse and that is empty your pockets!
I do however prefer using it and one big advantage it has over Eclipce is the way it synchronises with the file system, for big projects and slow computers (yes in work environments the PC's are a lot slower than our ones at home) Eclipse seems to struggle where IntelliJ seems to be quicker albeit with a slower initial indexing time.
IntelliJ Community edition obviously makes using it free but you soon want those extra refactoring and nice little goodies not included in the CC edition.
In my opinion, its generally a better user experience but whether its worth the cost is a question for each developer to answer themselves.
But lets be grateful we have up to three great IDEs for Java right now with NetBeans getting better all the time.
Data flow analysis : inter-procedural backward flow analysis and forward flow analysis, as described here. My experiences are based on Community Edition, which does data flow analysis fairly well. It has failed (refused to do anything) in few cases when code is very complex.
First of all I love intellij. There are at least a hundred features it has that eclipse lack. I'm talking magnitudes better in reliability and intelligence that no hyperbole can describe when it comes to refactoring, renaming, moving and others which have already been mentioned.
BUT, there is one thing that intellij does not allow which eclipse does. It does not allow running multiple projects at once under the same vm.
When you have separate projects for the front, middle, core, agents..etc, where they all have to interact with each other, you can not quickly modify and debug at the same time, afaik. The only way I current cope with this is to use ant scripts to deploy and update jars in dependent projects, or use maven.
Eclipse allows multiple projects to be debugged under one ide vm instance.

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