On Windows 10, I'm using IntelliJ version 2022.2.2.
I have the bundled Markdown plugin enabled:
However, when working on a markdown file (.md), the preview is completely gray, as visible on the right side of the following image:
Do you know what can be causing this issue, and how to solve it?
I've tried to disable and enable the plugin again, or to open different markdown files from different IntelliJ projects, but the problem remains the same.
Please add ide.browser.jcef.gpu.disable=true in Help | Edit Custom Properties and restart the IDE.
This option disables GPU acceleration for the browser component (JCEF) which seems to fail on your hardware for some reason.
Related
I do not use javascript in my current development setup and would [admittedly lazily..] like to avoid adding it to my dev stack. Is there a standalone viewer for .mdx files either in an IDE or maybe as an npm module? I did try:
Intellij : syntax highlighting only
Visual Studio Code : syntax highlighting only - though the docs of one of the plugins does claim the ability to display the javascript as well
Here is the info on the VsCode plugin. It does do the syntax highlighting but there is no preview pane for some reason
I've recently installed the Cursive plugin for IntelliJ IDEA. At first startup, a popup asks whether ClojureDocs examples should be downloaded:
I clicked on "Don't ask me again" by mistake, instead of "Download". This only happens on the first startup of the plugin, so there's no chance of getting the choice again (as explained in the relevant documentation).
How do I get this installed? As I'm fairly new to the language and environment, I find the examples of great help.
I've searched for a setting that would allow the plugin to ask again, or to initiate the download - no success.
I've tried to disable then enable the plugin (including restarts of the IDE) - no success.
I've tried to uninstall then reinstall the plugin (including restarts of the IDE) - no success. It seems to remember the old setting.
I imagine removing some configuration file or option would do the trick.
This applies to IntelliJ IDEA version 2020.3 and Cursive version 1.10.0-2020.3 - the Cursive plugin has already been installed and is active.
On menu go to File > Settings, in Settings Language & Frameworks > Clojure, heading Documentation Options, click Update.
I've started using IntelliJ for angular2 development recently but there seem to be a bug. I know from WebStorm that if I have following html:
<button (click)="onHaveClicked()">Button</button>
I should be able to jump to the method implementation in my typescript file using ctrl-click. But this shortcut isn't working at all. I've tried multiple different files.
Also autocompletion in html doesnt work at all. It's showing no angular attributes like ngFor etc. Angular2 is of course installed.
Was somebody with the same problem able to solve it?
IntelliJ doesn't come with Angular support built in. You can however enable it by installing the plugin. Settings -> Plugins -> Install Jetbrains Plugin -> Search for Angular.
This is a general thing with IntelliJ and the other editors. The specialized editors (like PhpStorm and WebStorm) comes with what you need for that editor by default. IntelliJ, which is more general, it often has to be installed manually.
I had been developing an application on a trial version of IntelliJ 2016 Ultimate. Since the trial version ran out, I resumed work using the Community Edition. However, trying to launch my application yielded the following error:
Unknown run configuration type #com.intellij.j2ee.web.tomcat.TomcatRunConfigurationFactory
"No problem" I thought, just an incompatible plugin that was installed with Ultimate that I don't really need anyway. I opened the Plugins section of the Preferences menu, but I can't find the plugin in question. Below is a partial screenshot of the plugin list where I would expect to see the plugin listed in the error message.
The configuration can also not be edited from the Run/Debug Configurations menu, but lists the Run Configuration error as: "Broken configuration due to unavailable plugin or invalid configuration data."
Am I really unable to uninstall the Ultimate plugin preventing my run configuration from working from the Community Edition? What can I do to fix this if so?
It's have been a long time since this question was launched but it might be useful for new searches.
I got the same error with Dart and Flutter.
Just go to Menu >> File >> Settings. Then type plugins on the search box. Check if your plugins need to be updated (in my case Dart and Flutter). I the screenshot I had clicked in the "update" green button. So it turns into "Restart IDE" text. It should fix the problem once you restart the IDE.
To the best of my knowledge the community edition of IDEA will not load and run plugins that are not compatible with it. Moreover, by default, the community edition uses a different configuration directory than the Ultimate edition. So unless you modified the config directory to use, the community version should not be picking up the Ultimate Edition's plugins. Based on the error you show, I think the issue is you simply need to delete that Run configuration. The error is saying that that Run configuration wants to use a Plugin (The Tomcat Plugin) that is not available (i.e. not installed).
If you still want to confirm what plugins are installed, you can manually uninstall a plugin by removing it from the plugins directory. Note that some plugins are simply a standalone JAR, in the plugins directory, others are sub-directories within the plugins directory. Just delete the JAR or sub-directory.
That plugins directory is the idea config directory. See Directories used by the IDE to store settings, caches, plugins and logs for information on its location. On windows for example, by default it will be:
Ultimate: C:\Users\UserName\.IntelliJIdea2016\config\plugins
Community: C:\Users\UserName\..IdeaIC2016\config\plugins
UPDATE
I forgot to mention... bundled plugins are in ${idea-install-directory}/plugins. So for the ultimate edition, the Tomcat plugin is in ${idea-install-directory}/plugins/Tomcat. That is why, as you mentioned in your comment below, you are not seeing that plugin in the user installed plugin directory I mentioned above.
updating flutter and android studio worked in my
case
Simple upgrade Dart plugin..
Go to Settings/Plugins/Browse Repositories and search dart (Language) and upgrade
this will work.
I had a similar worded issue "Run Configuration Error: Broken configuration due to unavailable plugin or invalid configuration data."
In the bottom right part of the Rider IDE, you will see a popup that says
"Plugin supporting feature (Run Configuration[UNITY_ATTACH_AND_PLAY]) is currently disabled."
Click enable plugins, and restart when Rider asks you to do so.
If this does not work, remember that one possible reason is the issues with macOS indexing (my Macbook started to malfunction after its battery hit 0). A way to check is to try and search a file from the top right corner(). If you can not find existing files, this means macOS messed up with indexing.
To solve it, click Apple icon on top left side and go to System Preferences -> Spotlight -> Privacy Tab -> Add all folders to the "won't index" box -> Remove everything you have added so they get reindexed.
https://www.techradar.com/how-to/software/operating-systems/how-to-fix-a-mac-s-broken-find-function-1298964
Lastly, go to Rider and hit File -> Invalidate Caches and Restart.
I'm trying to load a custom Control into the SceneBuilder that's running inside of IntelliJ. I downloaded the plugin from Gluon. In the stand-alone version I have installed, the option to import a custom JAR is available by clicking the gear icon under 'Library'. I see nothing like that when SceneBuilder is run from inside of IntelliJ in a tabbed editor view.
I would think that importing the JAR would allow me to see it show up in IntelliJ, but no such luck. It only shows up when SceneBuilder is ran stand-alone.
IntelliJ built-in Scene Builder is not the same as uses Gluon's Scene Builder. The former is a version embeddded in the IDE, introduced with IntelliJ IDEA 14, two years ago, but without several features or even menus or recent improvements, while the latter is the complete and updated version 8.1.1, that allows you using the latest features available and or adding custom controls, as you have already done.
If you check IntelliJ help, they also recommend using the stand-alone version (though they still point to the old 2.0 Oracle's version), they don't refer to the one they embed.
If you want to use custom controls, the only option here is the Gluon's version.
Note: I've edited the answer to clarify that IntelliJ built-in Scene Builder does use Gluon's Scene Builder, by scanning the content folder with the dist.jar. It is recommended having the latest version installed.