All I want is to make a folder at the "root" of my eclipse stuff so I can store projects from different classes together. However, it won't let me do that, the "Finish" button is greyed out until I select a parent folder - I must choose from one of the many projects I want IN this new folder. What do I do?
It kind of sounds like you'd be best served by a single project that contains all of the source files from your classes. The workspace is the root directory and any subdirectories are expected to be individual projects.
I agree with what everyone has been saying, create a project for the entire class as 1 project. Then you can create as many classes as needed with main() and only export that single class (or dependent classes as needed) to turn in. In addition, you could package each individual project assignment in a separate package. As stated above, leave your root (workspace) where it is.
Instead of creating multiple projects you may use Java packages option. Create a new package and put all your additional classes over there. Please note that all Java files should be under src/ directory of the eclipse project.
Related
I have two different java projects , and im trying to read one java file in another java file in different project.
eg: i have two projects project1 and project 2. They have packages named package1 and package2 correspondingly. I am trying to read a java file lets say JavaFile2.java which is in package 2 in JavaFile1.java which is in turn in package1 of project1.
I only know that i have to read package2.JavaFile2 , how do i achieve this ?
Need help Badly :(
Thanks
You will have to use either file path relative to project2 or, what seems to be safer option, use absolute file path when opening the file. Overall doing such kind of cross-reference between projects is not a very good idea as you will be tight to the relative location of the two projects.
Iam unable to understand the reason why you want to do so.
However, in the runtime both project1 and project2 will not have .java files available in JVM
having said that, the only option is to include the /src folder in your project archive (jar/war/ear) and writing an adapter which provides the resource from archive is seemingly possible.
You have to add a dependency to the project1 which specifies that the project2 is also on the classpath. Since you haven't specified IDE or anything else, there's nothing I can do right now...
You may try Maven for dependency management
http://www.mkyong.com/tutorials/maven-tutorials/
Well you can use getClass().getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource().getLocation().toExternalForm() to get the location of current project and "navigate" to the other project.
But like said before...I do not understand why you need such cross-referencing.
In the “create a Java project” wizard.
For the “project layout”, there are two choices:
1) use project folder as root for sources and class files.
2) Create separate folders for source and class files
Which one should I choose?
For the “Working set”
Whether I need to check the “Add project to working set”? What does it mean?
I always choose Create separate folders for source and class files, it's just separate your src files and your output files
The one you choose is up to you. It doesn't matter one way or another, at least as far as your tools are concerned.
The first option means that all files will be in the root directory of the project (typically PATH_TO_WORKSPACE/projectName). Your .java and .class files will be here if you choose that option. The second option will create PATH_TO_WORKSPACE/projectName/bin and PATH_TO_WORKSPACE/projectName/src. Your source files will be in /src and your compiled files will be put into /bin.
My personal preference is to not use the project folder as the root for sources and class files and to create separate folders for source and class files. However, it's all up to you.
In my opinion, choose different folders for sources and binaries. It will make source control and versioning easier.
Working sets only make sense when you are using more than one project for one workspace. I would guess that you won't need working sets until you are more experienced with Eclipse.
it is only a metter of user convinience. eclipse is able to handle both ways.
working set is a way to handle eclipse workspace when you have many projects. to get started, you don't need that.
I am working on a large project and I have configured multiple source package folders.
Project -> Properties -> Sources
However, when I import a library from this other source folder it says it doesn't exist so obviously with source folder is only liked in during compile time.
How do I get my project to reference these source files to work within my project without creating class files etc, and keeping both source directories separate from one another?
Thanks
If I understand your question correctly, you wish to make the source files from one NetBeans (Java Application) project A visible in another like project B.
In project B:
Go to Properties >> Libraries
Go to the Libraries category
Go to the Compile tab
Choose 'Add Project...' and select project A.
Regardless of whether the sources in A have been compiled, you should then be able to use them (e.g., name auto-complete, javadoc peek) when editing source code in B.
Make sure package names are correctly defined!
I'd like to create a folder under a package in Eclipse... The purpose of this folder is merely for organizational purposes. Meaning, I don't want it to be another package. Every time I try to add a folder under a package, it just creates a package instead. I'd like to have the following structure:
project/src/package1/someClass.java
project/src/package1/someFOLDER/anotherClass.java
project/src/package1/package2/anotherFOLDER/oneOtherClass.java
Is it possible to do this without adding a package? I come from a .NET/C# and C++ background... here I'd just add a folder and the reference to that class would be updated in the project.
How can I just add an organizational folder in eclipse? Thanks
Actually, folders are packages in Java so your question doesn't really make any sense in a Java context.
The term 'package' might be misleading... a package is definitely not the same as an assembly in .NET. You can think of 'package' more as a namespace, which in the Java world happens to be determined by the directory path.
For non-source files, you can create a new folder outside of your source folder, it will then be treated just like any other folder and not a package.
WTF are you supposed to do when you need multiple classes to be package private in a large project? Just look at your 25-30 class files all in the same directory?
That is a problem with Java's package system. Every package is a directory, and sub-packages are just different packages (no special visibility rules).
The most coarse visibility level is package-private, so that, yes, you have to lump your 25-30 files into the same package to avoid universally public visibility.
OSGi addresses this issue by introducing bundles, which can choose to not make packages visible to the outside. This gives you "project-private" packages.
Update: Also, you can reduce the number of files by putting related classes into the same source file. Only public classes need to have their own source file (I do prefer to have one file per class, though, public or not).
Well packages ARE folders.
If you want Eclipse to not build the contents of the package/folder, right-click on the project, select Properties, and under Java > Build Path edit the inclusion/exclusion filters.
If you're creating the folders to separate classes for organizational purposes, but still want them to be in the same package for access purposes, you can create multiple source folders and have them build into the same location. So, the folder hierarchy will look slightly different:
project/concern1_src/package1/someClass.java
project/concern2_src/package1/anotherClass.java
project/concern3_src/package1/package2/oneOtherClass.java
As I said, all three source folders can build into the same target directory. Or they can build into different target directories, if you like. The separate source folders will also carry over to the Package Explorer.
In eclipse the src folder is the main Source folder. First you just remove from the build source by right click the src folder and choose build path-> "Remove from build path". After that create the folder under src and right click the subfolder (package1) and again select buildpath->Use as Source Folder. Now you get src/package1.
I have several somewhat separate programs, that conceptually can fit into a single project. However, I'm having trouble telling Eclipse to make several folders inside a project folder.
A simple form of the structure would be:
/UberProject
/UberProject/ProgramA/
/UberProject/ProgramA/com/pkg/NiftyReader.java
/UberProject/ProgramB/
/UberProject/ProgramB/com/pkg/NiftyWriter.java
That is, ProgramA and ProgramB are both projects (in fact, they're currently existing Java projects), which conceptually fit into UberProject.
I don't think I'm supposed to make UberProject be a Java project; it's not a classpath, for instance. ProgramA and ProgramB do seem like they should be Java projects (they might use different build dependencies as well), but I see no way in Eclipse 3.3 to create two folders under UberProject that are intended to contain Java code. I thought about adding a .project file to each of the two sub-projects, but I'm not sure that's appropriate, either. Eclipse help isn't being helpful, and I didn't see anything on SO about this specific problem.
Just to be clear: assume as given the necessity of the existence of UberProject. UberProject can be a Java project, or not; it doesn't matter. (Incidentally, it does contain other folders that do not contain Java code.)
There are probably several ways to do this:
1) UberProject is your JavaProject. Right click ProgramA -> Build Path -> Use as source folder. Right click ProgramB -> Build Path -> Use as source folder. Both ProgramA and ProgramB will do incremental builds to the same directory.
2) Two java projects (ProgramA and ProgramB). You can use UberProject as your eclipse workspace which would be easiest or you can use an outside workspace and import ProgramA and ProgramB as external projects.
There are probably other ways as well (maven multi-module project). Your choice probably depends on whether you have cyclic dependencies between projects. It should be relatively easy to try both 1 and 2 and see what works best for you.
You can have multiple source directories in a single project, but your description makes it sound like you want multiple sub-projects in a project, which eclipse doesn't allow (as far as I know).
If you really just want multiple source directories, where ProgramA, ProgramB, etc. contain only java files and nothing else, then you can do this relatively easy. Right-click on your project in the package explorer, and select Build Path -> Configure Build Path.... In the dialog that pops up, make sure Java Build Path is selected in the left pane, click the Source tab, then click the Add Folder... button. Pick ProgramA from the list, and repeat for ProgramB, etc.
If you want each source folder to have its own output folder, just check the Allow output folders for source folders checkbox and edit the output folders as desired.
If that is not, in fact, what you want to do, then another option might be to group your projects into a working set. A working set is not an UberProject, but it does help keep your projects organized in the package explorer.
Do you need UberProject? I have the same layout but have multiple top-level projects created with File|New project. If not, can you make it a General rather than Java project?
So you can do it via having two Java projects in your workspace.
Then the question is how to group the two projects together under "UberProject"
One way is to have an "UberProject" workspace, and switch workspaces between UberProjects.
An alternative is to define "UberProject" as a working set (Window:Working Sets) and add PrmgramA and ProgramB as projects of that working set. Select that working set, and you see only those projects.
You can have one java project, and define multiple source folders for it. That is normally do that for "main" vs "test" hierarchies within the same project.
There are ways, and ways. Pick one that works for you :-)