If I use eclipse and right click on a part of Java source code, the context menu depends on the syntactic element the user clicks on (like: a method, a variable,...).
How can I implement this kind of behaviour in my own eclipse plugin, e.g. add an item to the context menu only if the user clicks on a method in Java source code. Furthermore, the plugin needs to know which method the user clicks on.
I guess I have to relate the clicking position to the abstract syntax tree that eclipse builds but I have no idea how to do that.
You do this with Eclipse Commands and you can enable them and change their visibility in many ways, depending on selection, global state, etc.
I guess I have to relate the clicking position to the abstract syntax
tree that eclipse builds but I have no idea how to do that.
The good news is you (generally) don't have to do that, Eclipse has done all that heavy lifting for you.
It is quite a broad subject, so I suggest working through some tutorials on Commands first:
Adding menus, toolbar and popup menus to the Eclipse IDE - Tutorial
Eclipse Commands Advanced - Tutorial
I installed the community edition of Intellij-IDEA 13 and I lost the tool window buttons on the right, left and bottom. Here's an image of the buttons on the right in Intellij-IDEA 12:
What happened to these? I can get them to pop up by going to View -> Tool Windows -> <Pick One>, but if I close them, I have to go back to the menu to get it to pop up. This isn't that big of a deal because there are also short cuts attached to some of them. But, I use the "Maven" one frequently, and there's no shortcut attached for that one.
Were these tool window buttons replaced with something better that I haven't discovered yet? If not, is there a way to get these buttons back?
Such buttons are invisible by default from left and right side. Click here if you want make them visible: And click again and they will disappear.
Maybe this will help:
http://www.jetbrains.com/idea/webhelp/intellij-idea-tool-windows.html
There's a button that will bring them right up without resorting to the menu selection.
Whilst the tool window buttons are not visible, you can double-tab alt to see them temporarily (the 3 borders containing them pop up), and whilst still holding down alt you can hit the relevant key (e.g. 1 for Project) to choose one.
Similarly, you can use ctrl-tab and a number to focus a tool window.
I commonly have tool windows visible on my desktop pc and not visible on my laptop (where screen space is limited).
I've seen few people use it like that and Im struggling with figuring: how can i move the navigation of my open files inside NetBeans IDE to be navigating through a tool bar on the side.
In other words, instead of navigating between files horizontally (just like in the browser), i want the tabs to be displayed on my right on NetBeans.
Any chance someone could explain?
Thanks in advance.
You want to put the window tabs to the right side?
At Tools|Options|Misc|Windows set "Tab placement" to "right"
See also https://blogs.oracle.com/geertjan/entry/upcoming_netbeans_feature_multi_row
In Netbeans 8 the tab placement options are in Tools -> Options -> Appearance -> Document Tabs -> Tab placement.
Hey am not pretty sure about the Netbeans. If you see in the eclipse there is an short cut ctrl+f6 in order to change the you can directly go to editor settings and then you can change it to what ever you want.
If you come to net beans i saw in one of the post they mentioned ctrl+tab try to look this link it might help you.
Thanks,
When you open a dialog in Eclipse, where is a form layout, you can see that when you hover your mouse over some item, its label or space between them, there's an auxiliary arrow shown. Screenshot:
My question is: is there any (simple) way to achieve the same in Java with SWT and JFace?
Regards
No there is no standard way to achieve this through SWT or JFace, as it is not a built in feature. It is not that difficult to add on your own though.
Have a look at this ConfigurationBlock.java file from the PDE source. This class is the base for all option blocks in PDE preference pages. This exact same code snippet is also used by JDT but it has a different copy in OptionConfigurationBlock.java.
The method that gets called for each combo control is ConfigurationBlock#addHighlight(..), which is responsible for adding the highlight when the control is in focus or when mouse is hovering over its label.
In Eclipse, when hovering over a method, variable, etc. a tooltip is displayed with the corresponding JavaDocs. Is there such a feature in IntelliJ?
For IntelliJ 13, there is a checkbox in Editor's page in IDE Settings
EDIT: For IntelliJ 14, the option has been moved to Editor > General page. It's the last option in the "Other" group. (For Mac the option is under the menu "IntelliJ Idea" > "Preferences").
EDIT: For IntelliJ 16, it's the second-to-last option in Editor > General > Other.
EDIT: For IntelliJ Ultimate 2016.1, it's been moved to Editor > General > Code Completion.
EDIT: For IntelliJ Ultimate 2017.2, aka IntelliJ IDEA 2017.2.3, there are actually two options:
In Editor > General > Other (section) > Show quick documentation on mouse move - delay 500 ms
Select this check box to show quick documentation for the symbol at caret. The quick documentation pop-up window appears after the specified delay.
In Editor > General > Code Completion (sub-item) > Autopopup documention in 1000 ms, for explicitly invoked completion
Select this check box to have IntelliJ IDEA automatically show a pop-up window with the documentation for the class, method, or field currently highlighted in the lookup list. If this check box is not selected, use Ctrl+Q to show quick documentation for the element at caret.
Quick documentation window will automatically pop up with the specified delay in those cases only, when code completion has been invoked explicitly. For the automatic code completion list, documentation window will only show up on pressing Ctrl+Q.
EDIT: For IntelliJ Ultimate 2020.3, the first option is now located under Editor > Code Editing > Quick Documentation > Show quick documentation on mouse move
Up until IntelliJ version 11, no, not just by hovering over it. If the cursor is inside the method- or attribute name, then CTRL+Q will show the JavaDoc on *nix and Windows. On MacOSX, this is CTRL+J.
Quote: "No, the only way to see the full javadoc is to use Quick Doc (Ctrl-Q)." -- http://devnet.jetbrains.net/thread/121174
EDIT
Since IntelliJ 12.1, this is possible. See #ADNow's answer.
It is possible in 12.1.
Find idea.properties in the BIN folder inside of wherever your IDE is installed, e.g. C:\Program Files (x86)\JetBrains\IntelliJ\bin
Add a new line to the end of that file:
auto.show.quick.doc=true
Start IDEA and just hover your mouse over something:
After doing CTRL+Q, you can
Pin the tooltip (top right corner)
Check Docked Mode (under gear in top right after pinning)
Size as desired
Click icon for Auto show documentation for selected item
Then when you move your cursor, the documentation will appear in this box. It costs you a little screen real estate, but I find it's worth it.
I'd post a screenshot but SO won't let me post images.
For Intellij 15, use the checkbox in File > Settings > Editor > General option Show quick documentation on mouse move.
You can also get there by typing "quick" or something similar in the search box:
In Intellij13, you can use Editor configuration like below:
IntelliJ IDEA 14.0.3 Ultimate: Press Ctrl+Alt+S, then choose Editor\General choose Show quick domentation on mouse move
Tips: Look at the top right conner (gear icon) at JavaDoc pop-up window, You can choose:
- Show Toolbar
- Pinded Mode
- Docked Mode
- Floatting Mode
- Split Mode
Adding on to what ADNow said. On the Macintosh:
Right click on IntelliJ IDEA 12
Click on the Show Package Contents menu option
Open the bin folder
Open idea.properties
Add the line:
auto.show.quick.doc=true
The easiest way, at least for me, was:
Ctrl+Shift+A
Type: show document
Show quick documentation on mouse move (set it to ON)
From IntelliJ Ultimate 2018.1.5, aka IntelliJ IDEA 2018.1.5, till 2019.3 , there are actually two options under File -> Preferences:
In Editor > General > Other (section) > Show quick documentation on mouse move - delay 500 ms
Select this check box to show quick documentation for the symbol at caret. The quick documentation pop-up window appears after the specified delay.
In Editor > General > Code Completion (sub-item) > Auto-display documentation in 1000 ms
Select this check box to have IntelliJ IDEA automatically show a pop-up window with the documentation for the class, method, or field currently highlighted in the lookup list. If this check box is not selected, use Ctrl+Q to show quick documentation for the element at caret.
Quick documentation window will automatically pop up with the specified delay in those cases only, when code completion has been invoked explicitly. For the automatic code completion list, documentation window will only show up on pressing Ctrl+Q.
In IntelliJ IDEA 14, it has moved to: File -> Settings -> Editor -> General -> "Show quick doc on mouse move"
In Intellij 2019, I did: File > Settings > Editor > General option Show quick documentation on mouse move.
File-->Settings-->Editor
Check "Show quick doc on mouse"
Now when you put the mouse over a method a tooltip with the documentation will appear. Sometimes the tooltip size is too small and you will have to resize it moving the mouse down to the bottom of the tooltip.
IDEA has "find action":
Open "Help" menu, type "doc", move cursor to "Quick Documentation" it will be highlighted.
Also "find action" can be called from hot key (you can find it in settings->hotkeys)
On mac in IntelliJ Ultimate (trial) 14 I have mine under Settings > Editor > General > Code completion. The tooltip short is F1 on my laptop.
It's called "Autopopup documentation in (ms):"
A note for Android Studio (2.3.3 at least) users, because this page came up for my google search "android studio hover javadoc", and android studio is based on Intellij:
See File->Settings->Editor->General: "show quick documentation on mouse moves",
rather than File->Settings->Editor->General->Code Completion
"Autopopup documentation in (ms) for explicitly invoked completion"
and "Autopopup in (ms)", which has been previously talked about.
I tried many ways mentioned here, especially the preference - editor - general - code completion - show documentation popup in.. isn't working in version 2019.2.2
Finally, i am just using F1 while caret is on the type/method and it displays the documentation nicely. This is not ideal but helpful.
In 2020.1 there is in editor javadocs rendering has been added. Screen shots borrowed from intellij documentation.
On my IntelliJ U on Mac I need to point with cursor on some method, variable etc. and press [cntrl] or [cmd] key. Then click on the link inside popup window which appeared to see JavaDocs
All of the above methods are useful but one basic thing missing you need to have src.zip in your JDK (C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_171). I assumed it comes preinstalled but for some reason, it was not present in my installation. Another thing to check is if your project is using the specified (1.8.0_171 in this case) JDK.
The answer is CTRL + P (NOT CTRL + Q)
Someone else posted this answer on JetBrains forum:
The idea is a different IDE. Try to discover its features and try to make the best of it, rather than trying to emulate whatever you used before.
For the most part, Idea has very high usability (much better than Eclipse IMHO) and is streamlined for supporting code editing as best as possible (rather than relying on wizards too much for example).
Javadoc: Ctrl-Q
A quick view of the implementation: Ctrl-Shift-I
Show context: Alt-Q
Show parameters (in a method call): Ctrl-P
Show error description. Ctrl-F1
... plus many more shortcuts to navigate in code and different idea views.
I think it rather nice that you can see just the specific bit of information you are interested in with a simple keystroke.
Have a look at the menus which will also show the possibly modified shortcuts for your keymap.
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Avatar
Jens Voß
Created June 12, 2008, 09:26
And, elsandros, in addition to what Stephen writes: Since you seem to be interested in IDEA's keyboard shortcuts, I highly recommend the "Key Promoter" plugin which helps you memorize the relevant shortcuts quickly.
Also very useful is the "Goto Action" feature, invoked by Ctrl-Shift-A. In the popup, you can enter a keyword (e.g. "Javadoc"), and the IDE tells you the available actions matching your search, along with keyboard shortcuts and the containing action groups (which often also give you a clue about how to navigate to the action using the menu).