I'm currently developing an eclipse plugin. This plugin contains a project nature which depends on the javaScript nature of jsdt.
Now at a few details the JavaScripts that the projects of my nature can contain are somewhat special.
They can contain "compiler hints" which are basicly statements beginning with #
They can contain return statements outside of functions
But at this two points the standard validation of jsdt come in and marks them as errors (which is normally right). I already managed to get this errors filtered out in the properties of the JavaScript validator (manually).
My question is, how can i exclude these errors from the validation of jsdt automatically for the projects with my nature?
JSDT uses concrete syntax parser which generates syntax errors.
You can't disable this. Only semantics error or warnings can be configured.
However you can disable entire validation of JSDT.
Below solution will suppress errors ands warnings which are generated while we save some changes on java script files. (Auto Build, Build)
Open Properties Dialog of Your Project.
Choose Builders item.
Uncheck "JavaScript Validator". And Press OK button.
Remove current errors and warnings from Problems View
This solution can't eliminate error or warning annotations in editor while you edit. They will show up on editor temporarily only when you edit it.
After a lot of research, hours of deleting markers and debugging i finally managed to delete the errors i wanted. In a bad bad way of course but i've come to a point where i just wanted this to work no matter how it's done.
If you ever want to delete existing problems that had been created during the validation process of jsdt you need to do the following (and you must not ommit anything):
Create a class extending org.eclipse.wst.jsdt.core.compiler.ValidationParticipant
Override isActive(), buildStarting() and reconcile() methods.
So there are two things you basicly have to care about.
The actual problem markers that will be created or had already been created at the end of the validation process.
The Problems created by the validation process. They are of the type CategorizedProblem and can be obtained by the ReconcileContext object that is passed to the reconcile() method.
It seems to me that the CategorizedProblems will be translated to problem markers after the validation process.
So what you need to do is:
Delete all unwanted problem markers of all files in buildStarting (this removes problem markers from all files in your project that are about to be validated)
Iterate the CategorizedProblem objects of the ReconcileContext (getProblems())
Create a new Array containing only the CategorizedProblems you want to keep
Set this new Array to the ReconcileContext with putProblems()
Delete the unwanted markers again for that file (i don't know why this is needed, please don't ask, i don't care anymore :-/)
An example implementation of such a validationParticipant could look like this: (this one will filter out problems complaining about return statements outside of methods:
[...ommited imports ...]
public class MyValidationParticipant extends org.eclipse.wst.jsdt.core.compiler.ValidationParticipant{
#Override
public boolean isActive(IJavaScriptProject project) {
return true;
}
#Override
public void buildStarting(BuildContext[] files, boolean isBatch) {
super.buildStarting(files, isBatch);
for(BuildContext context : files){
IFile file = context.getFile();
deleteUnwantedMarkers(file);
}
}
#Override
public void reconcile(ReconcileContext context) {
IResource resource = context.getWorkingCopy().getResource();
CategorizedProblem[] newProblems = new CategorizedProblem[0];
ArrayList<CategorizedProblem> newProblemList = new ArrayList<CategorizedProblem>();
CategorizedProblem[] probs = context.getProblems("org.eclipse.wst.jsdt.core.problem");
if(probs != null){
for(CategorizedProblem p : probs){
if(!(p.getMessage().equals("Cannot return from outside a function or method."))){
newProblemList.add(p);
}
}
}
}
context.putProblems("org.eclipse.wst.jsdt.core.problem", newProblemList.toArray(newProblems));
deleteUnwantedMarkers(resource);
}
public static void deleteUnwantedMarkers(IResource resource){
if(resource.isSynchronized(IResource.DEPTH_INFINITE)){
try {
IMarker[] markers = resource.findMarkers(IMarker.PROBLEM, true, IResource.DEPTH_INFINITE);
if(markers != null && markers.length > 0){
for(IMarker m : markers){
Object message = m.getAttribute(IMarker.MESSAGE);
if(message.equals("Cannot return from outside a function or method.")){
m.delete();
}
}
}
}catch (CoreException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
}
As i said, this is kind of a bad solution since the code relies on the String of the error message. There should be better ways to identify the problems you don't want to have.
Don't forget to add a proper extension in your plugin.xml for the ValidationParticipant.
Related
I know, but we really need it.
We have a clear division of labor.
They create templates, I fill them in runtime according to some rules.
Can't teach my business to insert something like this and be sure they really did it ok(so can't move any logic to templates):
$P{risk_types}.get($F{risk_type}) ?: "UNDEFINED"
Also can not fill from files hardcoded in some adapter hadwritten by god-knows-who and unchangeable in runtime. It's a web app. Best option is to find a way to replace that file source from adapter to a ByteArrayStream.
SO:
Need to substitute contents of parameters(also default ones) at runtime.
example:
need to set JSON_INPUT_STREAM
Like this unsolved thread.
https://community.jaspersoft.com/questions/516611/changing-parameter-scriptlet
Really hope not to work on xml level, but xml also can't solve my problem as far as I tried.
Thank you!
The easiest and cleanest way we did this(bypassing usage of tons of deprecated documentation and unfinished bugged undocumented static antipatterned new features):
Create context with repository extension
SimpleJasperReportsContext jasperReportsContext = new SimpleJasperReportsContext();
jasperReportsContext.setExtensions(RepositoryService.class, Collections.singletonList(new MyRepositoryService(jasperReportsContext, yourOptionalParams)));
Fill this way(after compile and other usual actions)
JasperPrint print = JasperFillManager.getInstance(jasperReportsContext).fill(compiled, new HashMap<>());
Now your repository must extend default one to be hack-injected(cause of hodgie coded "isAssignableFrom") successfully
public class PrintFormsRepositoryService extends DefaultRepositoryService {
#Override
public InputStream getInputStream(RepositoryContext context, String uri) {
// return here your own good simple poj inputStream even from memory if you found source
// or pass to another repository service(default one probably)
return null;
}
}
Setting: I am doing a programming experiment where I need to display a different method signature (one line of code) to my test persons than the line of code actually exists. Example:
// this code should be visible
public def aFunction(def a, def b) {
// this line of code should be used
public void aFunction(String a, List<String> b) {
The intention is that everything works like when the source code included the second line (like code completion, errors etc.), but only the first line is visible.
I've already tried patching the groovy editor I use and replacing some text on load and on save, but that just does not seem to do the job, using some code like
IDocument doc =this.getDocumentProvider().getDocument(this.getEditorInput());
doc.set(doc.get().replaceAll(...));
Sadly this leads to strange behavior like always marked as dirty files.
I've also tried using the getCompilationUnit method that the groovy editor supplies, but somehow this does not help in any ways (maybe because the "wrong" code was still visible in the editor?).
Finally I tried to wrap the InputStream for the IFile underlying the IEditorInput in the doSetInput-method like
IFile resource = (IFile) input.getAdapter(IFile.class);
InputStream in = resource.getContents();
//...wrap stream
resource.setContents(in, false, true, null);
but this only leads to the editor being completely empty.
Anyone got an idea on how to solve that problem?
I'm writing an Eclipse plugin, and I'd like to retrieve all instances of IProblem associated with the currently open text editor. I've tried the following:
IWorkbenchWindow window = PlatformUI.getWorkbench().getActiveWorkbenchWindow();
IEditorPart editor = window.getActivePage().getActiveEditor();
if (!(editor instanceof AbstractTextEditor)) {
return null;
}
ITextEditor textEditor = (ITextEditor)editor;
IDocumentProvider docProv = textEditor.getDocumentProvider();
IDocument doc = docProv.getDocument(editor.getEditorInput());
ASTParser parser = ASTParser.newParser(AST.JLS4);
parser.setSource(doc.get().toCharArray());
CompilationUnit cu = (CompilationUnit) parser.createAST(null);
return cu.getProblems();
However, when I run it against the following code in the editor:
import java.io.Serializable;
public class TestClass implements Serializable {
/**
*
*/
}
It doesn't find any problems. I would expect it at least finds a MissingSerialVersion problem. Perhaps I'm parsing the file incorrectly, which might cause this issue. I feel like there should be a way to get the CompilationUnit from the editor directly?
Update:
If I add a syntax error to the source file and then invoke the plugin, it reports the syntax problem, but not the missing serial version UID. I suspect this is some kind of configuration issue where warnings aren't being reported.
2nd Update:
This isn't just restricted to the MissingSerialVersion problem. Anything that is a warning, and not an error, is not found by this method. If I change the problem that I want to see to an error in the compiler settings (or even by passing in additional options to the parser making it an error instead of a warning), I still get no joy from the getProblems() method with respect to warnings. (It shows actual errors just fine, e.g. if I put an unrecognized symbol in my source code).
I am currently into Eclipse plugin development. I am in the need of using IMarker for a custom builder. I am creating project marker through org.eclipse.core.resources.IMarker and I am using IMarker.PROBLEM for two different situations.
How to delete and refresh a particular IMarker without deleting all the iMarker in the project resource.
I tried delete() method in the IMarker implementation. But it is not helping me out. And I found only the method deleteMarkers() in the project that actually deletes all the markers that are available in the project resource.
iProject.deleteMarkers(IMarker.PROBLEM, true,
IProject.DEPTH_INFINITE);
iProject.refreshLocal(IProject.DEPTH_INFINITE, null);
Please help me through this, I want to delete only a particular IMarker at the specified situation. I could not delete individual markers. Are there any source or reference you can point me to ? Thanks.
Basically, you have either store or find your specific markers. You can look for a marker in a selected resource (not on a project, but the current resource):
IMarker[] problems = null;
int depth = IResource.DEPTH_INFINITE;
try {
problems = resource.findMarkers(IMarker.PROBLEM, true, depth);
} catch (CoreException e) {
// something went wrong
}
When you have the correct marker, you can 1) update it by setting its properties, or 2) delete it using IMarker.delete().
The code snippet used here comes from the Mark My Words tutorial.
I want to use the default XML editor (org.eclipse.wst.xml.ui) of Eclipse in an RCP application. I need to read the DOM of the xml file currently open. The plugin doesn't offer any extension point, so I'm trying to access the internal classes. I am aware that the I should not access the internal classes, but I don't have another option.
My approach is to create a fragment and an extension point to be able to read data from the plugin. I'm trying not to recompile the plugin, that's why I thought that a fragment was necessary. I just want to load it and extract the data at runtime.
So, my question is: is there another way to access the classes of a plugin? if yes, how?
Any tutorial, doc page or useful link for any of the methods is welcome.
Since nobody answered my question and I found the answer after long searches, I will post the answer for others to use if they bump into this problem.
To access a plugin at runtime you must create and extension point and an extension attached to it into the plugin that you are trying to access.
Adding classes to a plugin using a fragment is not recommended if you want to access those classes from outside of the plugin.
So, the best solution for this is to get the plugin source from the CVS Repository and make the modifications directly into the source of the plugin. Add extension points, extensions and the code for functionality.
Tutorials:
Getting the plugin from the CVS Repository:
http://www.eclipse.org/webtools/community/tutorials/DevelopingWTP/DevelopingWTP.html
Creating extensions and extension points and accessing them:
http://www.vogella.de/articles/EclipseExtensionPoint/article.html
http://www.eclipsezone.com/eclipse/forums/t97608.rhtml
I ended up extending XMLMultiPageEditorPart like this:
public class MultiPageEditor extends XMLMultiPageEditorPart implements
IResourceChangeListener {
#Override
public void resourceChanged(IResourceChangeEvent event) {
// TODO Auto-generated method stub
setActivePage(3);
}
public Document getDOM() {
int activePageIndex = getActivePage();
setActivePage(1);
StructuredTextEditor fTextEditor = (StructuredTextEditor) getSelectedPage();
IDocument document = fTextEditor.getDocumentProvider().getDocument(
fTextEditor.getEditorInput());
IStructuredModel model = StructuredModelManager.getModelManager()
.getExistingModelForRead(document);
Document modelDocument = null;
try {
if (model instanceof IDOMModel) {
// cast the structured model to a DOM Model
modelDocument = (Document) (((IDOMModel) model).getDocument());
}
} finally {
if (model != null) {
model.releaseFromRead();
}
}
setActivePage(activePageIndex);
return modelDocument;
}
}
This is not a clean implementation, but it gets the job done.