IDE Plugin to handle Qooxdoo syntax - ide

does anyone know about an IDE or eventually a (preferrably Aptana) IDE plug-in which adds support for Qooxdoo framework?
Thanks.

Spket IDE has autocompletion support for qooxdoo:
http://spket.com/qooxdoo.html
Edit: Spket actually works fine with newer qooxdoo versions, just create a profile using a qooxdoo 1.3 SDK folder as shown in the linked page.

Related

How to use my own plugin into an existing eclipse tool

I used to develope my own plugins to add some funcionalities to an existing eclipse tool. I just used to add my plugin (jar file) into the plugin folder's tool and it contributed fine adding my own menus into the tool but it's not working anymore since they migrated.
The eclipse tool migrated from 3.x version to some hibrid between 3.x and 4.x. My old plugin used extentions to contribute menus. I tried a test plugin with e4 but it seems like if the eclipse tool is not reading anymore the plugin folder when I drop my plugin there... I cannot modify the eclipse tool, just try to add my own plugins to contribute with the application. Could somebody give a hand with it?

How to add angular support in intellij

I tried adding angularJS to Intellij following this guide, but the problem is that I am unable to access Java Script option inside Languages and Frameworks, and therefore I cannot change libraries. Any ideas how to make it appear?
The free edition of IntelliJ does not support Javascript. For that you need to purchase Ultimate.

Creating new dart project in Intellij IDEA 13.1.5 community edition

I wanted to play a little bit with the dart language and since recently I'm trying to switch from eclipse to IntelliJ IDEA I wanted to use that IDE. Unfortunately I can't figure out how I can create new dart project.
I've installed the dart plugin and installation looks fine - I have the plugin directory on my hard drive, dart's formatting options in settings etc. But I don't have any dart related option in the new project dialog (only java, maven, gradle, empty project etc.).
All resources I found told about using the new project dialog, or using WebStorm (like https://confluence.jetbrains.com/display/WI/Getting+started+with+Dart ).
Is it possible at all? Am I missing something?
I'm using IntelliJ IDEA 13.1.5 community edition.
EDIT:
Ticket created: https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/WEB-14060
I recommend using Stagehand (http://stagehand.pub/). It's a great new command-line tool that creates well-formed Dart project folders, complete with pubspec.yaml and even build.dart for Polymer projects. The tool can create console apps, web apps, Polymer apps, and AngularDart apps.
It looks that there is a bug in community edition of 13.1.x and it won't be fixed (but it's already fixed in community edition version 14 and it works in any version of ultimate edition) - https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/WEB-14060

Openlaszlo in Eclipse

Can anybody tell me how to add the openlaszlo plugin to the eclipse or any IDE for openlaszlo ?
Thank you!
IDE4Laszlo - http://wiki.openlaszlo.org/IDE4Laszlo - an Eclipse-based development environment for creating, editing, debugging, and testing applications based on the LZX declarative mark-up language.
Also check https://stackoverflow.com/a/11676129/363075 for details of other development tools for OpenLaszlo.
I would use the Spket IDE plugin. It has some support for Laszlo, and I've used it in projects. The old IBM IDE project has been discontinued back in 2006. The Eclipse Update Site for Spket is http://www.agpad.com/update.
If you would rather use an XML Schema file with Eclipse, there is an Ant build script capable of generating a custom XSD file for your application. See the OpenLaszlo Schema Generator site for more info.

Is there an eclipse plugin for Play2?

I know there is one for play1, but I don't find any for play2.
I hope the plugin can compile the templates to scala code automatically. It's not convenient now.
I just came across Scala IDE Play2 plugin for Eclipse Indigo/Juno and Scala IDE. The current features are
Syntax Highlighting (routes and templates)
Code completion (templates)
Formatter (routes)
Hyperlinking (routes and templates)
Note that hyperlinking to Java files is not supported for now. Also there are some limitations for the code completion feature, just take some time to read the doc. I didn't try it myself as I'm not working with Play2 right now, but thought it might be helpful for someone.
Edit: This answer is outdated. A Play Eclipse plugin has been written, as #Baztoune says.
There is no Play 2 plugin for Eclipse at the time I’m writing these lines. However, there is an eclipsify sbt command, provided by the Play 2 sbt plugin, which is able to generate an Eclipse project from a Play 2 application.
You won’t get syntax highlighting, contextual completion or code navigation inside Play 2 templates, but you can have them to be automatically compiled when saved by using the ~run sbt command (instead of just run). Check the Eclipse “General −> Workspace −> Refresh using native hooks or polling” option is enabled so it will take compiled templates changes into account.
Yes, here's how to get started:
Find the correct update site for your version of Eclipse from http://scala-ide.org/download/current.html.
In Eclipse go to Help->Install New Software. Use the update site from above to locate Scala related plugins.
Install both the Scala IDE for Eclipse plugin and the Play2 support in Scala IDE plugin. Note that the Play2 support in Scala IDE plugin is listed under the Scala IDE plugins checkbox.
I was unable to get this working at all starting from bare Eclipse, as many sources have suggested doing. The problem seems to be incompatible dependencies that only show up after much wasted time. The Scala IDE route eliminated this problem.
Yes. That's Scala IDE.
Update Site for Eclipse Juno and Kepler: http://download.scala-ide.org/sdk/e38/scala210/stable/site
Install with the following features:
Scala IDE for Eclipse
Scala IDE Plugins (incubation)
I use Scala IDE from http://scala-ide.org/ , then eclipsify my play2 project and import.
It works like a charm: it compiles my scala/java code.
You can get more details at this URL http://scala-ide.org/docs/tutorials/play20scalaide20/index.html