I need to integrate my app with Payapl rest API. we are not using maven. so i need to download paypal rest api sdk jar file and put in my lib folder.
Please tell me the link for downloading Paypal rest api SDK jar ?
Thanks in advance
The Git hub location is: https://github.com/paypal/PayPal-Java-SDK
If you need the jar, you can go to the Maven repository at: http://mvnrepository.com/artifact/com.paypal.sdk/rest-api-sdk
and click the appropriate version you need. After you click the appropriate version, under "files", click "jar" to get the jar. If you also want all the files like the source, javadoc, or pom, click the "view all" link.
I was having the same issue. I winded up going on github and downloading the sdk project and compiling it into a jar. It's got some dependencies too that need to be included. Wish I could upload the jars here because I know it must be alot of people having the same issue. But if you're reading this and you need those jars, shoot me an email at coreykhharden#gmail.com and I'll drop em to you in an email.
Related
I found a pretty old post with this question but unfortunately he didn't get any help. I hope someone can assist me.
I created a repo at GitHub. After cloning it to my computer I tried to add the following framework support: Maven, JSF, EJB, CDI, etc. I know I could add the files manually. But, I want to use what the IDE has to offer.
However, the only framework showing up is SQL, which is different from this post from stackoverflow and from their documentation.
Has anyone had this same problem and got it working?
Intellij reacts to changes in your Maven pom.xml file. Maven does not react to changes in your IntelliJ project module settings.
The steps that you should follow here are
Close IntelliJ
In a command shell, clone your Github repository.
Using an editor external to IntelliJ such as VI or Notepad, create a pom.xml in the root directory. Better yet, use a Maven Archetype to generate your pom.xml.
Now open IntelliJ. Choose File, New, Project From Existing Sources. Navigate to your pom.xml and follow the prompts.
I recommend checking Search for projects recursively and Import Maven projects automatically.
Finish the project creation.
Now, add dependencies to your pom.xml via the dependencies tag. See Maven Dependencies. Intellij will automatically react to dependencies that you add as long as it can see a Maven Repository on your local machine or on your network or on the Internet.
I know it is a little bit to late but I just post it because it is still an possible issue: You need to open YourProjectName.iml and make sure that the type (<module type="JAVA_MODULE" version="4">) is JAVA_MODULE and not something else!(In my case it was WEB_MODULE)
I can't figure out how to add the Intellij SDK plugin development source files to be able to navigate the files.
Right now I am only getting a decompiled list. I'd like the comments as well.
Note, I know there is https://github.com/JetBrains/intellij-community/blob/master/platform/platform-impl/src/com/intellij/openapi/editor/actions/
But shouldn't these already be included?
Can someone explain how to add the sources? I tried from module settings but couldn't get that to work.
If you're developing a plugin, or viewing/modifying an existing one, I suggest you take a look at the IntelliJ SDK docs, especially the prerequisites section, which explains how to set up a proper development environment.
Basically, you should clone IntelliJ community using
git clone git://git.jetbrains.org/idea/community.git idea
Then configure an IntelliJ SDK, and in the Sourcepath tab, add the local git repo to attach the source code.
I want to install S3 plugins for GO-CD into my GO server. I found "S3 artifacts poller" on http://www.go.cd/community/plugins.html, but the "Download" link leads to nothing about jar package.
Again the document states nothing about how you can download the jar neither. http://ind9.github.io/gocd-s3-artifacts/installation.html
Can anybody help me out how I can get the plugin jar package? Thanks.
Jars are available under Github Releases now.
Currently the author of the plugin hasn't provided the Jars. He has however provided the instruction to build one. I have suggested him to upload the jars on Github :)
IDEA has many plugins to use. I.e. IDEtalk is one of them which I use. How can I code a simple plugin that just connects to Internet and shows a web page? (no need for an address bar but it is not a problem to be). I want my plugin's shortcut's button locate at my IDE as like IDEtalk, Commander, Maven Projects etc.
Any ideas?
Check the documentation and the source code of the other plug-ins available in the public git repository of the Community Edition.
There is a Creating Your First Plugin guide on JetBrains web site. It covers all the needed steps from plugin creation to deployment to the plugin repository.
You might also want take a look in the source code of a simple plugin like Twitter Integration Plugin which I recently implemented. Or check a more complex one like this one.
Is it possible to publish your site reports to github? For instance, I run Checkstyle, Findbugs, Cross Reference, and other plugins and would like to have that publicly available. Since my project is already there, I'd like to just keep it there.
With the state of the plugins that exist now, you'd have to do some shimming. The site command (per your comments: wanting to use mvn:site) has a mechanism (stage) for pushing the resulting site somewhere, but it's all mostly predicated on SCP'ing it around to some final destination. For github, I don't think there's any obvious place to land things like that.
The solution would be to write something that extended the site plugin to check in the results to Github using the github pages functionality. Details on the github pages bits are available at http://pages.github.com/. To get there, you'll be writing something that checks in your resulting site to a root branch "gh-pages" and going from there.
There are maven github plugins wich works fine for me.
feature:
deploy artifacts
download artifacts
deploy site to gh-pages
See: https://github.com/github/maven-plugins and fork the example project at https://github.com/kevinsawicki/github-maven-example to try out.
The Maven way to publish your reports would be to build the Maven site and to deploy it using FTP, SCP or DAV.
I don't know if GitHub provides hosting space and supports any of this protocol. If it does, then the following resources will help:
Deploying a Site in the site plugin Usage page
10.6. Deploying Your Project Website
Maven 2: Getting "mvn site:deploy" to work
Releasing Maven projects to Github
Site Distribution in the POM Reference
If it doesn't, better look for another place to host your site.
I'm using this plugin for that: http://synergian.github.com/wagon-git/