I use Keppler 4.3.2 on Linux.
I just installed Android ADT. Problem is, the plugins is installed on my home dir (~/plugins and ~/features). I want it to be installed on ~/.eclipse32/plugins and ~/.eclipse32/features respectively.
I've read the FAQ and help. Cannot find what i am looking for.
EDIT: Problem solved.
When you perform your installations, just make sure you are logged in as root.
I stumbled over this myself awhile back, it was quite frustrating!
Related
I'm interested in Visual Studio Code, the new editor Microsoft released a year and a half ago. If I can get the hang of it, I think I'll switch to it on my Ubuntu. So I've done a "Hello, World!" program trying to find how to configure and use VSC's features.
I've seen on VSC's site and on some videos how to configure a folder so that you could go to definitions and find references, but it nonetheless doesn't seem to work for me. I don't know if I've done something wrong or if it's a bug on VSC's part.
Here is what my folder looks like. I've basically set up the tasks.json, launcher.json and c_cpp_properties.json files with default setup (compiling and debugging work just fine), but as you can see in the screenshot below, no indexing seems to be taking place since no symbol is found in main.cpp (even if I add new functions). Also, trying to find references of the i variable leads to No results, and asking to find i's definition doesn't do anything.
I've already tried :
Reinstalling VSC
Removing plugins
Adding the ${workspaceRoot} folder in the c_cpp_properties.json's include for Linux
Here's the screenshot. Notice my installed extensions on the left.
Nothing I've seen has helped me understand what the problem is. Have I done something wrong? I'm on Ubuntu 16.04.
Several binaries of the Microsoft C/C++ vscode extension for Linux are 64-bit. Therefore, if you're on 32-bit Linux, some of the cpptools functionality won't work. You can check the issue on GitHub.
I work also with Microsofts plugin C/C++ in a quite big C project. The C symbol references works good. Maybe you can try to add your projects root directory to "includePath" in c_cpp_properties.json.
But I am pretty sure, that local variables of functions are not parsed.
Maybe does the C++ intellisense plugin conflict with the Microsoft C++ plugin. can you disable the plugin provided by Austin
? The Clang plugin is also not necessary. The Microsoft plugin has Clang support and code completion integrated.
When I asked my question, I was on an Ubuntu VM. Yesterday, I installed an Ubuntu partition on my HDD, and vscode worked perfectly, with peek definition, find references etc.
After a few hours, I ended up in the same situation as when I made my post. But then I just closed and reopened VSCode, and it worked again. Definitely a VSCode bug.
EDIT : Seems to be the same issue as this one.
I have installed VS Code version 1.8.1. Machine is Windows 7, 64 bit. While installing ionide-fsharp extension, I am getting error "end of central directory record signature not found". It seems version 1.7.2 of VS Code works, however this issue probably seems fixed for version 1.8.0 see this git link. Any idea on how to get the extn installed?
Thanks
Found a workaround for this. Downloaded '.vsix' file of ionide-fs from this link. In VS Code Extensions tab, there is an option 'Install from VSIX'. That worked. So in case anyone is unable to install from vscode extensions tab directly(i.e. from Marketplace), they may try this way of installing an extension.
Just for information, I was getting the same error for version 1.7.2 of vscode as well while trying to install from Marketplace.
Seems there were bugs that exist in past versions, due to the embedded browser and other reasons; these have since been fixed.
The above solution seems a common way to install a troublesome plugin.
However, there is a long standing reason for this error, running out of disk space.
As of v1.54.1 (2021/03) and it turns out this can happen if your disk/home folder can run out of space during download OR install.
https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/118711
I have been using Linux for less than 24 hours, so please, if there is anymore information I should provide, do be quite specific about how to get that information.
I've been trying to install Node.js, express.js and eclipse. As you can see, ubuntu does recognise both node.js and express as installed on my system (I think!) and I got the Nodeclipse-extension for eclipse, but still Eclipse doesn't seem to recognise either node.js or express (see my image below). I also want to add that the time occurrence of the error, I was trying to build a Node.js Express Project.
At this point, how do I go about debugging the situation? The folder location shown in the image does not fully exist. I can only go as far as [...]/bin/ - I have been looking at error messages similar to mine, and it seems like people are getting such errors because they're lacking an installation, however, from my screenshot provided, I would think everything is installed as needed.
I am using a native 64-bit windows laptop with Linux (Ubuntu) installed through a virtualbox. Ubuntu is 14.04 LTS and just 32-bit, as I don't have spare 2 gb ram to give the 64-bit version. Sadness.
I'd appreciate any help!
In Eclipse Windows -> Preferences -> Nodeclipse
check what is configured for Node and Express
Read more on http://www.nodeclipse.org/
I found a solution, which worked for me:
WINDOWS:
I did double installations of the needed modules. They were both located in C:/Users/X/AppData/Roaming, in the Eclipse directories and finally in C:/Program Files/nodejs. When I deleted all the node_modules, besides critical ones for nodejs to function and then ran Eclipse with Nodeclipse, it seemed to function and Eclipse automaticly defined folders in its own subdirectory, in which Express were located.
UBUNTU:
Delete all node_modules files and run Eclipse with Nodeclipse. See the windows explanation for a more detailed overview. Same problem and solution seemed to be present for both systems. Do note that the file directories are of course not completely interchangeable. You'll need to locate your instances of node_module.
The instructions how to install GoClipse have been followed.
I'm not getting any autocomplete stuff happening at all, either for local packages that I write, for built in stuff, or for GAE stuff (I have downloaded Go src to the SDK folder as the wiki states).
Are there any settings that I can check to ensure it is set up correctly? Is autocomplete supposed to work in the current version?
As the GoClipse with AppEngine article you linked to says:
We assume the reader has a working copy of GoClipse running in their Eclipse environment.
so that’s not the article you want to refer to. Instead, check for GoClipse.
The auto completion is named content assist in eclipse. The GoClipse features state:
Now delivered with content assist via Gocode for Windows, OS X 64bit, and Linux 64bit.
Gocode is an auto-completion daemon. So you will also have to install and run that one besides your eclipse + GoClipse.
There is a bug in the current version of Goclipse for the Linux platform. It currently delivers a prebuilt version of gocode for Windows, 64 bit OS X, and 64 bit Linux. I have only been able to test it locally with limited resources, so I really depend on users to report the problems they find at:
http://code.google.com/p/goclipse/issues/list
If you are having problems, I urge you to download and install gocode into your $GOROOT/bin directory and see if that helps. Otherwise, the fix will come in the next release in a few days.
Also, sorry for causing you any trouble and thank you for trying Goclipse.
If you are not using a gocode upstream (but the one shipped with Eclipse) on Linux you are also no be able to build your application with CRTL+F11, although just clicking in Run->Run is going to work.
So, I strongly recommend to update your gocode on Linux, as simple as:
$ sudo GOPATH=/opt/go/ go get -u github.com/nsf/gocode
I've manually installed the latest Eclipse on our debian server and wanted to configure it so all users share the same configuration. It turned out less obvious than I thought: I don't seem to be able to install packages for all users. If I run it myself, all configuration data is saved under my own home directory. If I run Eclipse using sudo, everything is saved under the root directory but is not accessible for other users when they run Eclipse.
I've been browsing the manual of Eclipse and some forums, but apart from a "yes, you can" I couldn't find any information on how that should be done. The biggest problem is installing plugins for all users to be found. Any help is greatly appreciated.
Eclipse : 3.6.1 classic, installed using this procedure.
Server uname: GNU/Linux *** 2.6.26-2-amd64
Server is accessed using Putty, and Gnome desktop through realVNC. Just mentioning it if that is of any importance. Our sysadmin is on "prolonged leave" (working in Spain and never replaced), so I'm stuck without help here.
EDIT:
I've found a list of variables that could be set in the launcher.ini or config.ini regarding configuration : osgi.configuration.area, osgi.configuration.area.default, osgi.sharedConfiguration.area, osgi.configuration.cascaded, ... But I can't figure out exaclty how to set these correctly.
-- I asked this question also on Serverfault, but I am far from certain where this belongs. Feel free to merge both questions in the appropriate place. --
For plugins, you could add in eclipse.ini (for all Eclispe you install) a common path for "shared dropins directory".
All plugins copied in that directory will be detected when Eclipse is launched.