I'm using RubyMine, and wondered if there was any way to see the Javascript that Coffeescript compiles to while I am developing (prior to the page load).
It's not essential, I was more curious than anything else.
Right-click a file in the editor or project view, select "Preview Compiled CoffeeScript File..."
Related
i created a Javafx project using JDK 8 and when i tried to export it to a runnable .jar file, i got surprised that it doesn't run using CMD, and gives the following error :
"Javafx compenents are missing"
while it works perfectly during the compiling time(using the IDE) when i accessed the .jar files, i found it has just .class files (that i made), and the needed library files that haven't been exported (i made sure to select the "extract need library files extract required libraries into generated jar" option in Eclipse), is there a reason behind of this? and a way to solve it? thanks in advance
Ps: i tried this using Eclipse and Intellij IDE
I just wanna mention once again that I'm using JDK 8 where it has JavaFX library inside of it.
Did you try this?
There are detailed instructions on how to configure your IDE to run JavaFX with newer OpenJDKs (which do not come with JFX components in it).
It also explains how to create a new JavaFX Maven project from archetype, with all the necessary plugins to easily build your application while including the minimal Java components for it (using jlink).
This will ensure that anybody using your application will have those components.
I think this is some kind of TypeScript plugin, but I don't know what it is.
I can't determine what it is based on my installed plugins. How can I run the analysis for whatever plugin this is on the whole project? Currently, I have to open each individual file and wait for it to run the mystery analysis.
This is a built-in Typescript language service; it can be turned on/off in Settings | Languages and Frameworks | TypeScript.
When using it, all dependent files are not sent to server on re-highlighting the current file - it would be too expensive. That's why highlighting is not updated until you open a file in editor. You can try using Compile All in TypeScript tool window to see all errors.
To have the errors from all files shown while editing, you can toggle Show project errors button in TypeScript tool window; but note that this would slow down the performance
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'm trying out CoffeeScript support in IntelliJ, and although the highlighting/completion/refactoring support looks great, I can't figure out a way to automatically compile my .coffee files to their .js counterparts in order to use them in web pages, unit tests, etc.
The documentation mentions using Node for this purpose, but I'm primarily interested in writing client side code. I'd probably be able to create a run configuration that would use Cake to create my JS files, but this won't integrate nicely with IDEA's integrated unit test support, etc.
So... any help?
Use the IntelliJ IDEA plugin: File Watchers.
You would need to install coffee-script package in the global directory. (npm install -g coffee-script).
While you are editing the CoffeeScript file in IntelliJ editor, there would be a notification showing on the top.
Click "Add watcher" and the IDE will compile your code for you on the fly.
More advanced options could be accessed via Project Settings/File Watchers.
See also the official document.
I would like to ask how other more experienced Coffeescript developers are using their respective IDE's or editors with auto-complete when developing modular libraries and / or referencing external Javascript libraries (jQuery, jQuery UI, RequireJS, Handlebars, ...).
As much as I've tried various IDE's and plug-ins for Coffeescript, none of these seem to support auto-completion when the project consists of several script files. For example: in Visual Studio I can add a commented directive such as /// <reference path="/js/jquery.js" />. I'd need something similar for Coffeescript.
I have tried following without success:
Visual Studio with Web Workbench by Mindscape
Netbeans with dstepanov's Coffeescript plug-in
Aptana with the Coffeescript ruble
Further, I am aware of Jetbrain's WebStorm 3.x support for Coffeescript, unfortunately, my evaluation period expired before I realized I'd need this feature - can anyone confirm that setting the Javascript / Coffeescript Usage Scope works as expected with auto-complete?
So effectively what I am asking: is there an IDE or plug-in, commercial or otherwise, enabling auto-complete for Coffeescript libraries spanning multiple files?
Hate to answer my own question, but after giving JetBrains WebStorm 3.0.2 another demo run on another box, I figured it worked best and does have 'smarter than average' auto-complete for coffeescript projects. It simply loads all coffeescript files in to a global auto-complete context and you can add external libs (cs or js) as well using the project's scope settings. Could be better, but for now I cannot find any other IDE or tool running on PC or Linux, OSS or paid, that tops WebStorm and I don't have the fortunes to explore OSX alleys.
I am sure future tools, plugins, IDE's will pop up for various platforms that do offer great coffeescript module management and proper contextual auto-completion in the editor. So please, do keep the suggestions coming.
Thanks!
I personnaly use Kdevelop. I can't remember if I installed a plugins or something to get it work with coffeescript.
But it works very well, the highlighting colors are pretty, when ctrl+d it add coffeescript commentary and so on.
Also I do make compilation directly in KDevleop.
Well also it's free, I am using it on linux debian but I think it works on most platforms.
Check it there : http://kdevelop.org/