Creating Dijit > Editor > Plugins - dojo

I have been googling this subject for hours. Does anyone have an examples of a custom plugin being deployed in Dijit's Editor. I'd be really interested to look at it because I have been following this without much success and of the few examples that exist out there none of them come with working examples :(
(I'm looking to create a pulldown menu like the one for font selection)

There's no difference between a custom plugin and a "builtin" plugin, so I suggest just looking at a small builtin example like TabIndent, and then move on to the font selection itself.

Related

How can I create a gedit plugin using python?

I wanted to create a simple gedit plugin that could save the current file when mouse leaves the text area (just like the <<leave>> event in tkinter) using python3. I went through wiki but I couldn't get much from it (All I could do was to create a plugin that just showed in plugins menu,nothing more). Can anyone help me with this?
According to the Python plugin HOWTO:
The gedit window based on Gtk.Window.
Looking at the documentation for Gtk.Window, it inherits from Gtk.Widget.
Looking at the signals documentation for Gtk.Widget, it looks like leave-notify-event is what you are looking for.

How to add new toolbar item in Window-builder editor in eclipse(ex. copy, paste...)

I am trying to extend windows builder toolbar.I searched a lot but just found this: http://help.eclipse.org/kepler/topic/org.eclipse.wb.doc.user/html/NewComponentsTutorial.pdf
Outside the fact you do not ask for any question, any google request or basic tutorial will guide you to such thing.

ExtJS 5 Custom Theme Testing

I recently started to create custom theme for ExtJS 5 by Sencha.
Following http://docs.sencha.com/extjs/5.0.0/core_concepts/theming.html I managed to create ThemeDemoApp, inherit ext-theme-neptune, change $base-color to green and refresh/rebuild ThemeDemoApp with my-custom-theme. All ok.
My problem is, ThemeDemoApp is quite poor for testing a custom theme. A panel, tab, button and a modal window. That's it?
After bit of googling I bumped into http://dev.sencha.com/ext/5.0.0/examples/themes/index.html. (Why isn't this mentioned in the guide?!) Heading says: View and test every Ext component against bundled Ext Themes, or your own custom themes.
My question is: How? How do I test my own custom theme against this example? Do I have to dig into the source (themes.js) and build such page/application myself?
The examples - including the Theme tester - is included in the ExtJS download.
You can modify the list of themes available by editing the shared/options-toolbar.js file.
To get it to find your theme, you'll either need to name it similar to the others (ext-theme-name), or modify themes.js accordingly.
Or you could just hack the theme.js file to hardcode your theme.
(Ext JS 4 used to create an example page for themes automatically - it doesn't seem to do that now, though)
According to advice at How do I include a JavaScript file in another JavaScript file? I decided to load both options-toolbar.js and themes.js (with just minor modification - commenting out Ext.onReady(...) function in themes.js) and I used functions getBasicPanel(), getCollapsedPanel(), etc. in my own application to create the same testing page (absolute-layout container that fits the page).
Anyhow, I guess Robert's answer is the correct one - there is no prearranged, ready-to-use functionality from Sencha :-(

Code assist - Sencha Touch

I am following this tutorial http://vimeo.com/album/1573372/video/37212149
It seems that there is a way to type "xmodel" and have a standard model's code generated automatically. I am using Webstorm IDE - is there a way of doing this in it, and any configurations I can import?
Thanks
Seems 'Live Templates' is the feature you refer to - it allows expanding abbreviations into code snippets. See http://www.jetbrains.com/webstorm/webhelp/live-templates.html, http://davidtucker.net/articles/live-templates-phpstorm-webstorm/
WebStorm doesn't come with predefined live templates for Sencha, but you can easily create them yourself or search the web for existing templates. See ST2 Power Tools, for example

Quick Helper Annotaion in Java Editor

I'm trying to develop a eclipse plugin, which displays a Quick help annotation in the Java Editor.
The Quick Help icon should appear at every place, a type statement is missing in the Java-Code.
I'm a total noob in Eclipse plugin development. I read a few things about it and understand the idea with Extension points but I don't get how to add a annotation in the Eclipse Java editor.
Are there any examples or tutorials available for this problem/topic?
I don't know how to start and appreciate any help or hints.
I finally made it by placing a Marker and specifying a markerResolution for him.
Resources:
Howto add a Marker
,
Marker Customization ,
Adding a Quick Fix to a marker type