IDEA install script - intellij-idea

I am not sure if that is the right place to ask. Please share the better ones if you know it.
We have some specific settings for IntelliJ IDEA in our team and we would like to create something like install script for newcomers. It has to be with a dynamic URL for IDEA and plugins... Is there something which can help us? Or we need to create this script?
Thanks for the help!

As for settings, I use a read-only settings repository: https://www.jetbrains.com/help/idea/sharing-your-ide-settings.html
This will also sync the list of enabled/disabled plugins. But IMO unless you are very strict about what plugins you use or have an extremely large number of custom settings, IMO it's not too much to ask of a new employee to set up their IDE by hand. Shouldn't take more than 30-60 minutes and it will help them get an overview of what plugins and inspections you are using and why.

Related

Customize user interface for n8n workflows

Is it possible to customize the user interface for n8n workflows? if possible, can someone give an idea. Thank you.
You can find the source code for all the frontend code inside their repository: https://github.com/n8n-io/n8n/tree/master/packages/editor-ui
The editor-ui folder inside packages is what you are looking for.
The app is written using Vue.js ans it's very easy to understand. You can see the n8n-theme*.scss files in the mentioned folder that could be a good starting point.
Feel free to add / share ideas on what you're looking to do and I'll try to help if possible.
Also they have a very active community that can be found here: https://community.n8n.io/

Intellij GitHub plugin unable to add reviewers

I use IntelliJ IDEA 2017.3.2 Ultimate Edition.
I use the GitHub plugin bundled with it to create pull reviews. I am however not able to add reviewers when I create them.
Is this even possible? If not can the support folks please direct me if I can raise this request (or perhaps even contribute to this?)
Some UI to work with pull requests would be great too so it would be amazing to see if this is possible.
It is not possible at the moment - https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-85079 and related, https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-146659
You are welcome to contribute if you would like. See https://github.com/JetBrains/intellij-community/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md

what is the IDE for using SPECMAN

I have been searching for what IDE to use in order to start studying SPECAMAN.
I would like to know what is the IDE for e/specman and where I can download it ?
Also if there is a good tutoriaal for it.
Thanks in advance.
This is a plugin for eclipse which costs money. http://www.dvteclipse.com/ I've never tried it.
Most people at my work use VIM or emacs to edit e-files. I use JEdit.
Here's a crash-course on Specman.

How to practice HAML and SASS (environment)

Could you please give me advice how its better to practice HAML and SASS.
I`ve downloaded and installed everything for windows and i can compile files and use it via command line. But still i want to be able to code and browse it at once, not writing anything in command line.
I mean what shall i do on my localhost to use it? Am i to use with any kind of engine, Drupal for example. Or is there a more simple way?
Thanks in advance!
I have recently discovered a free online SASS/SCSS-HAML editor, named Voyage, developed by Zhi-Qiang Lei (thanks!). Very useful for beginners to practice, and for everyone to test snippets quickly.
http://voyage-editor.herokuapp.com/
Hope it helps
Ok so, for Sass and Compass, you can always use the --watch flag to watch the modified files and recompile them on the go.
Now I reckon this doesn't account for HAML wich doesn't have a --watch flag, or other languages such as CoffeeScript etc. The best solution for the moment for a stable and easy to work with environment is to use an external software that will do the command line work for you.
There are several out there, I've tried out a few of them — depending on your current platform and how much you want to put in (from 0$ to 9$). I don't know a lot of free preprocessors manager so if people want to go and comment with free alternatives I'd be glad.
The best in my humble opinion is LiveReload because it's what I've tested to be the most permissive in your organization, it compiles fast, reloads your browser on change, etc.
Cons are it's best to use it on a Mac, considering the Windows version is still in beta and far from finished. But if you're on a Mac, to me it's definitely the way to go.
You can use FireApp too, it does the same job but it's a little less permissive. There are things you can't do with your Compass configuration files, folders you have to name a certain way, etc. It's also paying, but it's cross-plateform (coded in JRuby).
On the free side of life, you currently have CodeKit for Mac but it's free only during the beta and will become paying. On the other hand it's really worth it's money for how well executed it is and it will really make your life simpler.
You can probably go look on the internet for similar softwares, but you get the idea. Currently the best way to have an easy to use work environment while avoiding the command line is to go through those kinds of softwares.

anyone know of a shared To-do list plugin for eclipse

Does anyone know of shared TODO list plugin for Eclipse that allows users in a a development team to all view and edit the same list of tasks?
Mylyn can be used to integrate issue tracking systems into the IDE.
It does this by making tasks a first class part of Eclipse, and integrating rich and offline editing for repositories such as Bugzilla, Trac, and JIRA.
If you are not looking for a lightweight solution, then you might give it a try.
Other than the already built-in "Tasks"? It works by adding TODO, XXX or FIXME (in caps) in comments in the source code. I think this works pretty good and we use it at work all the time.
I don't know about such particular plug-in, but maybe that you could take a look to what the Communication framework or the Mylin feature offer you in term of collaborative work.
If you want to track a TODO-list among a couple of developer, you really want to use a issue-tracking system such as Bugzilla, Trac, or Jira. As soon as you've started to add tasks to it, you'll want features such as sorting on different fields, different kinds of views, etc.
That said, Mylyn is the best way to integrate it into Eclipse.
Ive just installed a plugin called fasttrack which is just the kind of thing I was looking for. Works best with SVN, but you can also use it with CVS.