Auto drop to frame , debug mode ,eclipse - eclipse

I'm using Eclipse IDE for Java
Maven Projects
when I'm on debug mode and try to
edit the code and save it, the green
line should go to the first line of the
function (like drop to frame) to see
the change, my problem now when I
edit the code and save it, the green
line do not go back to first line of
the function as before
what settings should I modify?

Related

Lost column/line fields in the status bar using Eclipse

I used to see the line and column (character count) in the status bar of Eclipse (actually Precision32's version of Eclipse), but somehow it went away. According to the Eclipse UI guidelines it's supposed to be there:
Editors with source lines of text should show the current line and
optionally column numbers the status line. It's optional for the
editor to show line numbers for each line in the editor itself.
But I can't find anything that tells how to turn it on. I didn't update my editor, AFAIK.
Edit:
The editor is active.
I have no idea what happened, but it started working again. Might be when I installed Juno eclipse, maybe some register settings in common were touched? I hate doing a re-install to fix a problem as you lose settings and it isn't getting to the root cause, but for this round I'll have to accept it.

Eclipse IDE lost popup menu suggestions

I've seem to have lost the ability in my Eclipse to auto-correct errors in my source code lines.
For example, a line like this:
Date date = new Date();
has red jagged lines beneath the Date() part. Previously I could mouse hover over it see a popup menu of options to fix it. Now I all I ever get is a popup with the text "Cannot resolve to a type".
The only change I can think of that I've made and I don't know if it has anything to do with this problem, is that I started editing my .java files with an outside editor. Then focusing back into Eclipse I get a popup saying the source has changed and do I want to update so I say OK.
Sometimes I will edit inside Eclipse and sometimes i will edit the source outside of Eclipse. I'm not sure if this is a bad practice or not?
Its your wish to edit Java files outside or inside eclipse. But Java editor has many features which are very helpful to developers. I suggest to edit Java files inside eclipse only.If you find other editors are good or you used to it then no problem you can edit Java files out side eclipse also. The problem you mentioned in not related to it. But make sure that changes are applied before building project in eclipse.
Solution
This occurs whenever there are multiple classes are available with the same name in you build path then eclipse don't know which one to import by default. So keep the caret on the error line and press Ctrl+1. Then a eclipse gives options to user to import one among these. See the picture below. Choose the right one then error will disappear.

Eclipse code line change

I often switch from Eclipse to Netbeans and back. There is a feature in Netbeans that allows you to see changed lines in code due to repository.
Example:
Is there something similar in Eclipse?
Yes, right click the file Team -> Show Annotation... When you hover over the colored line numbers you see the committing user and the commit message. If it is a local change it is just white.

Running my program from PyDev with one click?

I am developing using the PyDev plugin in Eclipse. My program uses several classes in several files. I usually run the program using the green "play" icon or using Control+F11. The only problem is that it will run the file, which is currently in "focus". Usually this is not the one containing the starting point of my application. As I run my program something like 200 times a day, this means that I need 200 extra click on the mouse and often forget about this.
Is there any way of setting the default file to launch?
Yes, change the launching to rerun the last launched, so Ctrl+F11 will launch the last one -- and use F9 to launch the one with focus -- See instructions and details at: http://pydev.org/manual_101_run.html
For me, the shortcut is Ctrl+Shift+F9. I don't think I've changed any keybindings, so its strange that it would be different from the official documentation.
Go to Run->Run History, and select the run that is your 'main' run. Now you should be able to use Ctrl-Shift+F9 from any other file to rerun your main. If it isn't Ctrl+Shift+F9 for you, look on the console window that should be at the bottom of your screen showing the stdout after every run. There is an icon on the top of it that has the green start arrow with a yellow arrow underneath it pointing to the right. That is the command to relaunch with the same configuration. If you hover over that, it should tell you the keyboard shortcut you need.

Eclipse doesn't stop at breakpoints

Eclipse 3.5.2 is not stopping in breakpoints. It's as if the debugger is using an older version of the source file.
Tried the usual refresh, clean all projects, build all, with no change.
Already in debug mode and the break point is checked.
*ok ended up deleting the whole project and checking it out again. but still curious what the issue was.
Perhaps you have pushed the Skip all Breakpoints button in the Breakpoints view.
Thanks guys, this really saved my day too.
I antecedently pressed on skip break points, if you did the same this will result on break point appearing with a backslash icon on them.
To bring it back to normal:
Switch to Debug perspective.
press on the breakpoints view tap -->> upper right hand corner of the screen, you also can go there by Window->show view-> breakpoints.
5th icon from the left you will see break point with backslash. press on that one.
To confirm, try putting break point on any line, and it should appear normally.
Press Ctrl + Alt + B
OR go through below steps
Clearing all Breakpoints fixed the issue
(within debugger perspective: Window -> Remove All Breakpoints).
Rebuilding the project did not work for me.
Sometimes you do start the debug mode but the debugger doesn't actually get attached/gets detached. I've also had this issue a few times when my laptop was reacting really slowly.
A reboot always solved it for me.
Also try doing a clean all (works miracles in Eclipse).
Please un check this from the Eclipse Menu.
Run->Skip all breakpoints.
I think this will be enabled permanently once You select the Remove all Break points option in the Debug/Breakpoints window.
Performing a "Clean All" worked for me.
Click on "Project" tab --> "Clean" menu-item.
In the "Clean" dialogue-box select "Clean all projects" radio-button. Leave the remaining values as default. Click "OK" button.
BINGO!!!The remote-debugging started working for me as beautiful as before.
It has also happened to me, in my case it was due to the GDB launcher, which I needed to turn to "Legacy Create Process Launcher". To do so,
either change the default launchers to the "Legacy Create Process Launcher", in Windows>Preferences>Run/Debug>Launching>Default Launchers.
or choose this launcher in the debug configuration of your application (Run>Debug configurations>choose your debug configuration). Under the "main" tab at the bottom, click on "Select other...", check the box "Use configuration specific settings" and choose "Legacy Create Process Launcher".
I had a conditional break point wrongly put on the method entry point. Removed that breakpoint and it worked.
Note: Tried Skip all Breakpoints, Clean all projects, Refresh, close Eclipse with no luck before nailing it.
In my case, somehow the breakpoints got automatically disabled because of this switch turned on, skip breakpoints.
Breakpoints have seemed to work and not-work on the versions of Eclipse I've used the last couple years. Currently I'm using Juno and just experienced breakpoints-not-working again. The solutions above, although good ones, didn't work in my case.
Here's what worked in my case:
deleted the project
check it back out from svn
import it into Eclipse again
run "mvn eclipse:eclipse"
Since the project is also a Groovy/Http-bulder/junit-test project, I had to:
convert the project from Java to Groovy
add /src/test/groovy to the Java Build Path (Source folders on build path)
include "**/*.groovy" on the Java Build Path for /src/test/groovy
I had all breakpoints enabled and configured as I should. But whenever I clicked "debug" it would only step through the program (press f5/f6) Turns out there was a rogue setting
Right Click project > debug configurations > "Debugger" tab > uncheck "Stop on startup at:" box
One reason for this situation can be, that you have pressed 'skip all breakpoints', when play- and another pictures are smaller than those normally are (because of higher resolution screen). Another thing can be, that break points are stopped only under VM threads, not under normal threads!
Go to (eclipse-workspace)\.metadata\.plugins\org.eclipse.wst.server.core and delete all tmp folders.
Clean and Restart server.
In my case I had to enable then disable an option in the Preferences.
I don't prefer the debug view to keep jumping when a breakpoint is hit so I disabled this option, but caused the issue in question.
The solution was to enable it again, start a debug session, the breakpoint is hit and shown in the UI, then disable again the option.
Looks like a bug in Eclipse 4.17
UPDATE
There is also another simpler way that will make Eclipse show the debugging highlight at the breakpoint or rather refresh the debugging UI to work as it should. After the breakpoint is reached, Eclipse will ask you to switch to debugging mode if you are not already in, click switch button, then activate the debug tab/view, you will notice that the stepping buttons are activated and the breakpoint line is highlighted.
First remove all 'toggle breakpoints' from the class file.
Then Eclipse requires a restart.
Then make sure 'Skip All breakpoints' is NOT enabled. If it is, make it disabled.
Then, add toggle breakpoint to the lines in your file and run on Debug mode.
A pop-up window must appear to confirm if you really want to Switch to debug mode. Say Yes and proceed.
I suddenly experienced the skipping of breakpoints as well in Eclipse Juno CDT. For me the issue was that I had set optimization levels up. Once I set it back to none it was working fine. To set optimization levels go to Project Properties -> C/C++ Build -> Settings -> Tool Settings pan depending on which compiler you are using go to -> Optimization and set Optimization Level to: None (-O0).
Hope this helps! Best
I had the same problem, and I found the real cause.
I had written some concurrent / multi-threads code, while I added some breakpoints inside the code running in a new thread. So, when JUnit tests ran over, and stopped soon, the code will not reach and stop at the breakpoints.
For this situation, we have to click and select "Keep JUnit running after a test run when debugging" check box at "Debug Configurations..."
switching workspace worked for me.
Go to File > Switch Workspace and choose different folder (workspace)
That's it and BINGO! Debugging started working for me as beautiful as before.
go breatpoint and click on 5th to eclipse->window>->show view->other->debug->breakpoint and click on 5th option (Skip All Breakpoints)
Make sure, that you are using the correct JRE version to debug your project. Especially if it's a third party project.
Also make sure, that there is no trigger point set for any breakpoint.
I had the same problem when I was using Eclipse Juno.. I installed Eclipse Indigo and it works fine. Try to reinstall eclipse.
A different solution worked for me. I also faced the same problem - debug points were not being updated, though they are shown correctly in the IDE editor and in Break Points tab.
My problem and solution are: While creating the project, the 'Default Output Folder' points to different location. At a later stage, I have mavenized the project, selecting "Project Right Click - Configure - Convert to Maven Project". So there are two sets of output folders exist in my project file system. Cleaning the project multiple times did not solve my problem. In the background it was pointing to different binary files. Finally, when I removed the Maven Feature and cleaned the project, this time everything worked fine. Env: Eclipse Juno and JRE is J2SDK 1.5.
I get all breakpoints skipped and marked as warnings when using -O2 in the compiler flags. Switched to -O0 -g in my makefile and breakpoints now work. Hope this helps.
If it doesn't stop even after unchecking SKIP ALL BREAKPOINTS, you can add this android.os.debug.waitfordebugger just before your breakpoint.
If you do this,your app will definitely wait for debugger at that point everytime,even if you are just running your app,which it will only find when your device is connected to eclipse.
After debugging you must remove this line for app to run properly or else android will just keep waiting for the debugger.
Try to restart eclipse, that works sometimes. I guess there is some kind of cache there.
In my case the debugged code in JBoss was older than the code in the Eclipse project. Rebuilding the .war solved the problem.
Facing same problem with Eclipse Luna.
Project clean didn't work.
Rebuild didn't work.
What makes it work is uninstall the app on the device before each debugging.
I use the Eclipse FileSync plugin for live remote debugging. Make sure you tick Allow different target folders & edit the Target folder file setting in the tree view.
Setting the Default target folder by the Browse... button without Allow different target folders will set all folders to the same target (I had both libs & classes set to the default for libs so my breakpoints did not update).
Since Eclipse 4.7/Oxygen released in June 2017, there is a new concept of "Triggers for breakpoints", which is displayed as a small "T" next to the breakpoint "blue bullet" icon.
All the other breakpoints that are initially suppressed by triggers
will be hit only after any of the trigger points has been hit. All the
triggers are disabled after a trigger point is hit and will be
re-enabled after the run.
In order to reset all the "trigger" flags, you need to do the following steps :
Switch to Debug perspective.
Right-click in the "Breakpoints" view
Select "Remove All Triggers".
Note : this step does not delete all your breakpoints, which occurs when selecting "Remove All" in the same contextual menu.
Note : the keyboard shortcut to enable the triggers is "Alt-R", which takes precedence on the shortcut to open the "Run" menu with its mnemonics, when the "Breakpoints" view is selected.