I'm currently working on some projects using the Eta programming language.
It is a new purely functional programming language that runs on the JVM. Because of this, sometimes it requires to write Java code to make wrappers.
Currently, I'm working using Emacs, but for Java, I think that IntelliJ is the best IDE out there.
The thing is, Eta relies on a custom build tool, called Etlas. And although there are plugins for SBT and Gradle, Etlas works the best for Eta.
Etlas handles maven dependencies itself. Is there a way of adding this build tool to IntelliJ so it can see where the dependencies were downloaded and one can use the Java autocompletion when working on Java code?
Related
I'm currently following this tutorial: https://openjfx.io/openjfx-docs/ (JavaFX and IntelliJ IDEA). I use Intellij 2021.3.2.
I have created a project (1. Create a JavaFX project), which worked out great and didn't need to 2. Set JDK 16 because it was already set to 17 (which I guess is fine).
But here begin the weird stuff (and I'm very new to programming so I'm sorry if it sounds silly). "You can also set the language level to 11 or greater." I don't have this option. Because it's "can" I felt like it wasn't a big deal but if someone can explain what this is all about? Just out of curiosity, because I'm at the very beginning of the tutorial and I kinda only understand half of it.
Then 3. Create a library, and I don't have what they have, and my stuff is red:
So when they said "add the JavaFX 17 SDK as a library to the project" I didn't know what to do. I also didn't know what to do to fix the red stuff.
And finally, they say "Warning: If you run now the project it will compile but you will get this error: ..." but if I click on this button
everything works! which you know i'm not complaining about but I would like to understand a bit more what is happening.
And then they suggest I should 4. Add VM options to fix the problem that I don't have. So I figured maybe my computer set the VM options correctly without me knowing it but there is currently no VM option (and it works). Should I add them nonetheless?
Thank you for your help, I'm very lost and feel like I don't really understand anything.
The current documentation in the openjfx tutorial for getting started with JavaFX using Idea is incorrect, at least for recent Idea releases (2021.3 +).
The tutorial is written as though a new Java project was created, rather than a new JavaFX project. Once a new JavaFX project has been created, most of the rest of the steps in the tutorial are either redundant or wrong.
Step 1, “Create a JavaFX project", does a lot more than just “Create a Java project”, which is why everything else is different from the tutorial.
A better tutorial for getting started with JavaFX with Idea, is the official Idea documentation:
Create a new JavaFX project.
Differences between creating a new Java project and creating a new JavaFX project
The new JavaFX project:
Provides a build script for Maven (pom.xml) or Gradle (build.gradle).
Adds the appropriate dependencies for JavaFX base, graphics, controls and fxml.
Provides an example application and controller code that you can run immediately.
The example project is modular and provides a module-info.java
Because the program is modular and dependencies are downloaded via maven and recognized by the IDE, you don’t need to manually configure VM runtime options for the module path and adding modules.
Idea will recognize the Maven or Gradle projects and automatically synchronize the initial transitive dependent libraries with the Idea project.
There are options in the Idea Maven tool window which will allow you to synchronize further changes to dependent libraries or javadoc and source code in libraries.
Selects a JDK and attaches it to the project, automatically downloading the selected JDK version if not already present.
Sets an appropriate language level for the project.
When you just use the create new Java Project option, it doesn’t do any of those things, so you need to do things manually instead, which is what the rest of that tutorial is about:
Manually download the JDK and configure it in the SDK.
Manually download the JavaFX SDK and add the libraries from it to your project.
Manually configure VM modular arguments.
Manually maintain any other dependencies.
Manually associate javadoc and source code.
Manually write the code for a basic application.
Manually set the project language level.
Doing all this stuff manually is more work and more error prone. The manual work usually leads to a worse outcome and a project that is more difficult to maintain for many people getting started with JavaFX, so I do not recommend it.
Versions
In terms of the versions to use, I recommend using the most recent stable (non-beta) releases of both JDK and JavaFX, regardless of what versions may be referenced in any tutorials you may be using.
You can set JavaFX versions in the Maven file generated by the new JavaFX project wizard, then press the button in the Maven Tool window to synchronize the Maven project with the Idea project.
Language level settings
These are important later on, but pretty irrelevant when just getting started.
The language level settings:
Tell the compiler what version of the java byte code to compile the application to.
Tell the IDE what language syntax rules to enforce and provide help with.
If you use Java 17 only features, the app won’t run on a Java 11 VM.
You can define the settings in Idea manually:
language setting level.
But it is better to set them in the compiler section of the maven project and synchronize the project with Idea, which will also configure the settings in the IDE.
IMO, set it to the most recent stable version and have a requirement that your application be run with that Java version as a minimum (you can enforce that by using jlink or jpackage to bundle the JRE version you choose with your packaged app).
I'm just about starting to learn Java. Reading about, I installed Netbeans.
Running Apache Netbeans IDE 11.2.
The Java version is 13.0.2.
I'm promptly follow the Quickstart guide on the netbeans website.
File>>New project>> Java >> Java Application.
Errhmm, I don't have this 'Java' option. All I have is
So what's the difference between Java & Java with Maven/Cradle/Ant . At this point in time, I intend to start with basics of Java programming and then move on from there. SO which option am I meant to be starting with? If I'm missing Java, how can I add it ? Going through the installation procedures didn't give me any option to choose from.
p:s - this is all running on Mac OS Catalina
You can start with any of Java with ... option. I use Java with Ant option.
Maven, Gradle, Ant are build-tool addons i.e. they provide additional support if you intend to use any of these as your build tool.
When you choose Java with Ant option, it will let you create, compile, debug and run your Java programs without requiring anything additional. After using this option, you will get an interface as shown in the screenshot given below:
Maven, Gradle and Ant are build tool which allows you to compile, unit test, package and (if you like) even deploy your Java applications (they do support other languages btw).
I suggest you to start with one of those (Maven is very popular and probably a little bit easier than the others) instead of relying on your Java IDE specific features.
Once you master a build tool you can change IDE (IntelliJ is also a very good option ;-)) and will still work as before. You also find plenty of resources and help (like Stackoverflow) if you need hit some problems.
Best of luck!
Building Java projects straight from the IDE in IntelliJ has been nice. It's fast and it just works. I wasn't able to find any documentation on how IntelliJ does these default builds. I'm guessing it uses Ant? What I want to do is automate this fast and painless build process for anyone who downloads my project. Is that possible?
I've usually used Maven, but it's very slow and error prone. I actually wasn't even able to convert this to a Maven project, because Maven refuses to find JUnit despite setting up the dependency according to examples in the official docs. I also tried to generate Ant build files from the IDE, but those do not work out of the box and after googling a bit, seems like that is not a good approach?
IntelliJ IDEA has its own build system, called JPS. It has limited support for automatic download of dependencies and it's really hard to invoke from the command line, so it's unlikely to be the best option for everyone who downloads your project, unless you want to force them to use IntelliJ IDEA.
I have inherited someone else's code. He used CMake to build the fragments for C++ and the fragments for Java/Android. I cannot believe that he would have used Notepad and Windows Explorer to manage his package/class structure and implementation. Is there a code manager tool or IDE that allows you to put your Java code in one package and your C++ in another package? The CMake scripts would build the projects separately, of course.
CMake is just a build tool.
You can use any IDE you like to write the code and then use a different tool to build it.
Eclipse supports both Java and C++, but I wouldn't recommend it for either.
Given that Scala support is itself a plugin in intellij, is there any way of writing intellij plugins leveraging the existing Scala functionality?
Things like support for parsing Scala, getting an AST, traversing the class/trait hierarchy, etc. should already be a part of the scala plugin, and I was wondering if I could make use of all these niceties from the get-go without having to redo it all myself.
It's possible since Intellij plugins can depend on each other
See e.g. http://plugins.intellij.net/plugin/?idea&pluginId=7080 and http://plugins.intellij.net/plugin/?idea&pluginId=5007