I found, that Ctrl-Click (for example, on class usage) doesn't work on one of my installations of Idea. Simultaneously:
Context menu action like Go To -> Implementation(s) works
Control click in PyCharm works
Machine is remote desktop Windows Server 2016. Idea is 2021.2.
What can be done to fix?
Had a similar issue due to Rider importing settings from Visual Studio on the first run. Resolved it by changing the Keymap (Rider->Preferences->Keymap->Keymap drop down) back to the default one (IntelliJ).
In our case it was really an old SonarLint plugin. Check in Settings / Plugins. After the update the problem was solved.
I was having the same problem and going to File -> Reapair IDE... fixed it for me.
I have this commented out piece of code in intellij:
As you can see, there is no possibility to fold comments here. However, the same commented block in Webstorm can be collapse:
Is there any way to configure comments collapsing in intellij/Android Studio?
To fold an arbitrary selected block
Select contiguous fragment of code in the editor.
On the main menu, choose Code|Folding|Fold Selection/Remove Region, or press Ctrl+Period
Source: https://www.jetbrains.com/idea/help/folding-and-expanding-custom-blocks.html
EDIT:
It is a know bug, which can be found in JetBrains Bug Tracking System - IDEA-106702. It only affects block comments (/* comment */), all other comments are treated correctly.
General Editor folding settings
You can configure code folding in Settings (CTRL+ALT+S)
- Editor → General → Code Folding
Here you can toggle folding outline and also configure default folding behavior for various file sections such as comments, imports, xml tags and more.
In Android Studio 3.0
Firstly put cursor on a code block that you want to fold/collapse and Hit
Ctrl + NumPad-`
It took 4 years, but the team behind Intellij IDEA managed to solve this problem! This is the first version where the bug is solved:
IntelliJ IDEA 2019.1 (Community Edition)
Build #IC-191.6183.87, built on March 27, 2019
JRE: 1.8.0_202-release-1483-b39 amd64
JVM: OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM by JetBrains s.r.o
Windows 10 10.0
I need to use Sikuli for automation but I am unable to take screenshots. The problem is that when I click on "Take Screenshot" or "Create Region" the IDE gets hidden but selecting area option does not appear....
Make sure you are using Java 6 not 7. If you try to run both on the same computer, make sure to take a look in the system32 folder. Because Java 7 copies java.exe and javaw.exe there. You have to delete/rename them.
Better Solution: Uninstall Java 7 and install Java 6. ;)
Uninstall JDK, which ever version you have, I too faced the same problem, but after uninstalling JDK, it was working well
Finally I have decided to get rid of aptana from eclipse but the "Software update" menu shows "unistall" as disabled. How to enable unistall and release me of aptana woes? Is there a workaround or I simply go searching for aptana everywhere and delete all files which I will eventually do?
this thread explains how to do it cleanly. About Eclipse -> Installation Details and delete it from the Installed Software list.
This was done on an Eclipse for PHP Developers v3.0.2
Go to:
Window -> Preferences -> Install/Update -> Uninstall or update
software that is already installed
Select "Installed Software" and pick the one you want to remove and select "Uninstall..."
I ran into this problem at one point and never got a completely clean uninstall of Aptana from Eclipse. I ended up just re-downloading a fresh copy of Eclipse and starting over. I had to reinstall a few other plugins, but it was easier that trying to find all the Aptana leftovers. At that point, the stand-alone (non-plugin) version of Aptana seemed to work better in general, so I just went with that.
Yep. Just had the same problem. Couldn't find any good solutions around the internet, so I did the following:
find / -name '*aptana*' -print0 | xargs -0 rm -rf
Seems to have worked pretty well, though Aptana left little bits of evidence here and there.
Try to run eclipse as Administrator and see what this link can do.
Go to Help-->About Eclipse SDK--> Installation Details --> Select Aptana --> Uninstall
This worked for me.
Try to revert to a previous configuration:
Help->About Eclipse->Installation Details
Than click on "Installation History" tab and select an earlier configuration that doesn't include Aptana (it will remove any component installed after it).
I didn't mind completely reseting the eclipse environment. So, I used my OS' package manager (synaptic, ubuntu software Center, etc.) to remove eclipse then deleted /home/user/.eclipse from my home folder.
I'm interested in looking at Erlang and want to follow the path of least resistance in getting up and running.
At present, I'm planning on installing Erlang R12B-3 and Erlide (Eclipse plugin). This is largely a Google-result-based decision. Initially this will be on a Windows XP system, though I am likely to reproduce the environment on Ubuntu shortly after.
Is there a significantly better choice? Even if it is tied to one platform.
Please share your experiences.
I highly recommend the Erlang mode shipped with the standard Erlang distribution. I've put together a "works out of the box" Emacs configuration which includes:
Syntax highlighting & context-sensitive indentation
Dynamic compilation with on-the-fly error highlighting
Integrated Erlang shell
And more....
You can browse my GitHub repo here:
http://github.com/kevsmith/hl-emacs
I've only done a small bit of coding in Erlang but I found the most useful method was just to write the code in a text editor and have a terminal open ready to build my code as I need to (this was in Linux, but a similar idea would work in Windows, I'm sure).
Your question didn't mention it, but if you're looking for a good book on Erlang, try this one by O'Reilly.
You could also try NetBeans there's a very nice Erlang module available: ErlyBird
Install Erlang: sudo aptitude install erlang
Install a recent JDK: sudo aptitute install sun-java6-jdk
Download and install (the smallest) NetBeans edition (e.g. the PHP one): www.netbeans.org/downloads
download the erlang module ErlyBird: sourceforge.net/projects/erlybird
manually install the modules via NetBeans
ErlyBird features:
syntax checking
syntax highlighting
auto-completion
pretty formatter
occurrences mark
brace matching
indentation
code folding
function navigator
go to declaration
project management
Erlang shell console
I'm using Erlang in a few production systems personally as well at the office. For client side testing, documentation and development I use a MacBook Pro as the OS/platform and TextMate with the Erlang bundle as an editor.
For sever side development and deployment we use RHEL 4.x/5.x in production and for editing I use VIM. Personally, I've got 4 machines (slices on slicehost.com) running Debian using Erlang for a few websites and jobs.
I try to go with the smallest 'engineering environment possible', usually the one with the fewest dependencies from apt or yum.
To add to the Emacs suggestions, I would also recommend that you look at the advantages of distel when running the Emacs erlang-mode.
I've seen answers suggesting TextMate here, so I wanted to add another good Mac OSX tool:
ErlangXCode plugin to XCode.
I've been using this since I started with Erlang and really do like it.
The download link on his blog is broken, here's the real download:
http://github.com/JonGretar/erlangxcode/tree/master
You could also try a virtual server on demand service like this one from CohesiveFT
Select the components you want (e.g. erlangrb12 + yaws + MySQL + erlyweb) and it will build a vm image for you to download or to put onto ec2.
Rolling you own locally is quite straightforward too if you follow the instructions in the pragmatic programmers book Programming Erlang
Just a quick note:
The Erlang "compiling" process described in Ciaran's post (described for Ubuntu 6.10 btw) can be easily skipped using apt command in any Debian based distro:
apt-get install erlang
Do not forget to install these packages if you see it fit:
erlang-doc-html - Erlang HTML document pages
erlang-examples - Some application examples
erlang-manpages - Erlang MAN pages
erlang-mode - editing mode for Emacs
Good Luck!
I like Justin's suggestion, but I'll add to it: this solution is great for learning a language. If you don't rely on something like code-completion, then it forces you to learn the language better. (If you are working with something with a huge API, like Java or Cocoa, then you'll want the code completion, however!)
It's also language-agnostic, and in the case of an interpreted language, particularly one that has an interactive interpreter, you'll probably spend just as much time in the shell/interpreter typing in commands. Even in a large-ish python project, I still work in an editor and 4 or 5 terminal windows.
So, the trick is more about getting an editor which works for you. I'm not about to suggest one, as that's heading towards evangelism!
I just use Scite. Type something and press f5 to see the results.
Just wrote a guide on this on my blog, heres the abridged version:
Part 1: Download what needs to be downloaded.
Download and install the Erlang run-time.
Download and install TextPad.
Download a .syn file for Erlang and place it in the system folder of TextPad. For me, this folder was C:\Program Files\TextPad 5\system. I'm not quite sure who did this syn file (the site is in another language), but they did a good enough job.
Part 2: Set up syntax highlighting.
Open up TextPad. Ensure no files are opened. Go to the 'Configure' menu, and select 'Preferences'. In the preferences window, click 'Document Classes'. There should be a list of currently recognized languages. Click the 'New' button (it is right under the list of languages), and type 'Erlang'. Click apply.
Click the '+' button next to 'Document Classes'. This should expand the list, and Erlang should now be on it. Click Erlang. You should see a list of file extensions associated with Erlang, click 'New', and type '*.erl'.
Now click the '+' button next to 'Erlang' on the left. This should expand a list of several more menus. Click on 'Syntax'. Click the drop down menu and select erlang.syn. If erlang.syn is not there, then the .syn file was not properly placed.
Feel free to edit some other syntax options to customize TextPad to your liking.
Part 3: Compiling from TextPad.
Note: as of 12/05/08 there are severe problems with compiling in textpad. The Erlang shell somehow ignores new compilation when it is done in text pad. This is only useful for checking for errors, when you want to actually run the code, compile it in the Erlang Shell.
In the preferences menu again, click 'tools' on the left.
Click the 'Add' button and select 'Program...'. Navigate to the erl5.6.5\erts-5.6.5\bin\ folder and select erlc.exe. Select and single click the new entry in the list to rename it. Click 'Apply'.
Now click the '+' button next to Tools on the left. Select erlc, or whatever you have named the new tool (I named mine 'Compile Erlang'). The parameters field needs to read '$File', and the initial folder field should read '$FileDir'.
I have had good success with Erlide.
If you use Vim I recommend you Vimerl (http://github.com/jimenezrick/vimerl):
Features
Syntax highlighting
Code indenting
Code folding
Code omni completion
Syntax checking with quickfix support
Code skeletons for the OTP behaviours
Uses configuration from Rebar
Pathogen compatible (http://github.com/tpope/vim-pathogen)
From what i've tried (and are still up to do), a good addition to an erlang dev. environment would be a virtual machine running ubuntu/yaws/erlang. Perhaps Erlyweb (erlang/yaws framework) would be nice checking out too.
Ciaran's posts (this would be the first of his "series") about his erlang install is nice, as he details the steps in setting up the server (and other stuff like xmpp with jabberlang).
Since you're switching to Ubuntu eventually anyways, I highly recommend using erlang-mode for emacs (which comes bundled with the Erlang distribution). It is officially what all the core developers use and what many other developers use because of the many features it offers you.
Installing the Erlang distribution itself should be simple :)