The libraries are located in the project in this way
The makefile looks like this
When I try to call make compile I get the following errors from both libraries
At the same time, when navigating through an instance of these libraries, I am transported to their description in the library, so I do not understand what is wrong
Related
As far as I know, kotlin native allows you to compile kotlin source code to platform specific nativ code, that runs without any virtual machine.
But I don't seem to find any example on how to build a windows executable (.exe) from kotlin source code.
Why is that?
Can you do it or not?
https://kotlinlang.org/docs/native-get-started.html shows you how to set up a basic Kotlin Native project, and compile it. The only note is that kotlin native will generate a .kexe, which is just a renamed .exe.
I am using same version of IntelliJ IDEA (2016.3.5) on Windows and Linux. The problem is that on Linux IntelliJ IDEA doesn't show java documentation after clicking "Ctrl" + left mouse button , but it shows decompiled .class file. It's not big problem but it's annoying. What may be wrong? I tried to restore default settings but it didn't help.
You're not showing docs, you're drilling down into the implementation of a library method. You haven't attached the sources for the library, so the ide has no choice but to decompile the code in order to let you see the method you're trying to reach. If you're using maven you can download the sources and then when you drill down you'll see real code. Restoring default settings won't help, because this is how its meant to work.
Further; when IntelliJ shows documentation (ctrl-q on my machine) it tries to build the javadocs directly from the source, not from the published javadocs which it ignores. This is another reason to download the sources along with your libs.
BTW: When you 'release' your own libs to your corporate repo you should be building and releasing sources too, so that the users of your libs get the ability to drill down into the implementation, and so that they get access to your api's javadocs.
Im creating a JavaFX application in IntelliJ IDEA, and I am new to IntelliJ.
I would like to be able to compile my JavaFX application on a Raspberry Pi, but my app is quite complex and relies on 3rd party libraries, etc.
I would like to be able to see what exactly is going on in IntelliJ when I run "Make Project"
Is there a command line output screen that Im simply missing? I want the exact command that IntelliJ uses to compile the application.
Essentially, on the Pi, I want to get the code from my repo, run the compilation command and produce an executable JAR on demand.
I have of course read the doco on how to compile a JavaFX application, but if I could see what IntelliJ does, that would be fantastic.
So far I haven't found such an option but the process is most likely some sort of flow based on IntelliJ plugins and the documentation seems to support this theory.
Perhaps you'd consider using a software management and build tool such as maven or ant or something similar. This should give you (almost) unlimited options to configure your desired build sequence and 3rd party dependencies.
Reading Google instructions, I found that I have to import and reference the Play Service library into the project.
So I created a project, copied google-play-service_lib project, imported it as a library project, went to the main project and added this library as a Module dependency. However, I still have an error that IntelliJ IDEA does not recognize package com.amazon.device.ads.*.
So I had to add a library dependency as well, although this library already exists in the /lib directory of Play Service library project.
Am I doing something wrong or we're actually requested to add both dependencies in IntelliJ IDEA? If yes, is this maybe a bug in IntelliJ IDEA 13? I can't remember of having to do the same in earlier versions of IntelliJ IDEA (I have been using it for three years).
This is how it looks in the end and it works only this way! Check the last two dependencies.
I'm having some difficulties with cmake (2.8.7) and Eclipse + CDT (3.7.1). I'm using a CMakeBuilder (http://www.cmakebuilder.com/), which I found via the search function here. Actually I thought, that'd be it.
Problem is that it does not provide any import function either: So I need cmake to generate Eclipse CDT4 Makefiles initially, which requires me to maintain two separate build systems and to work on copies. One for deployment, one for development.
Furthermore I'd need to copy my changes over into the original project, file by file, because I can just work on copies, that cmake generates together with the Makefiles. At the end: twice the work. Double-check integration each time.
Is there anything one can do to work directly on a cmake project from Eclipse (or another sane IDE)? Mainly I need good C++ editing (very large set of libs, so the paths are a major problem, and cmake searches for these on every platform). I could maintain cmake on my own, but Eclipse (and other IDEs) miss a useful import settings. Some IDE would be nice though. ;)
Best,
Marius
As I remember KDevelop4 has native support. In other hand: why don't edit CMakeLists.txt directly as a simple script (from an editor*) and use the official GUI? I haven't used Eclipse with CMake, but in Visual Studio the solution is generated automatically after editing any of project or solution CMakeLists.txt file. I expect something similar from Eclipse, too.
Eclipse CDT4 Generator
More info.
*: Notepad++ has highlight for CMake files.