Can anyone please help me? What should i do to fix the error "The file InfoPlist.strings couldn't be opened because there's no such file"? It's appeared after i've updated my project from SVN. Actually THERE IS InfoPlist.strings in my project, i have no idea why Xcode doesn't see it.
Maybe the following information will help you to understand what's going on: when i expand InfoPlist.strings by clicking on the triangle next to it, then it shows: InfoPlist.strings (English), InfoPlist.strings(German), InfoPlist.strings(French). The English is black, but French and German are red, so i suppose it is probable something wrong with them and it might be the cause of the error. Also, i've got Localizable.strings, which behaves in similar way. It has (when expanded) Localizable.strings (English), Localizable.strings(German), Localizable.strings(French) and just as in InfoPlist.strings English is black whereas French and German are red.
When i look inside my project's folder - there is the following there: a folder named en.lproj contains Localizable.strings and InfoPlist.strings. Folders named fr.lproj and de.lproj contains the same - Localizable.strings and InfoPlist.strings. Seems like i've described everything. Please explain me what to do. I work with Xcode 4.2
I have just managed to fix this problem !
My second Strings.plist file (FR) had an absolute path. The drop down menu for path type (absolute, relative) was greyed out in the info pane of xcode so I could not change it to a relative path.
The solution is to change it manually in the project.pbxproj file:
If you open the file to view the source, and search for "plist", find the following line:
/* fr */ = {isa = PBXFileReference; lastKnownFileType = text.plist.strings; name = fr; path = /Users/[YOUR-USER]/[PATH_TO_PROJECT]/fr.lproj/InfoPlist.strings; sourceTree = "<absolute>"; };
Notice that the path attribute is the full path to the file, and that the sourceTree attribute is set to <absolute>.
Now change the path so that it's relative:
/Users/[YOUR-USER]/[PATH_TO_PROJECT]/fr.lproj/InfoPlist.strings
should become
fr.lproj/InfoPlist.strings
Also change the sourceTree value from <absolute> to <group>
The line should now look like this:
/* fr */ = {isa = PBXFileReference; lastKnownFileType = text.plist.strings; name = fr; path = fr.lproj/InfoPlist.strings; sourceTree = "<group>"; };
Repeat these steps for all your localizations that are stuck with absolute paths.
Save the file, commit the changes, and voilà! no more no such file problem :)
info.plist source code:
like:
....
{isa = PBXFileReference; lastKnownFileType = text.plist.strings; name = en; path = en.lproj/InfoPlist.strings; sourceTree = ""; };
....
check "path" is a absolute path?
Had the same problem, easy fix for me: select the plist file in xcode and make sure its "Target Membership" is ON (for the build you are doing).
The path to your Info.plist file is defined in the build settings for the target. Look and see what it's set to. If the project has come from a different machine, it might be an absolute path, but it really should be a path relative to the project root, like Sources/Info.plist.
Best information is right here. Sorry to be so cheesy as to put a link to this - but they edited it in September - and now it makes sense...
http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/general/Reference/InfoPlistKeyReference/Articles/AboutInformationPropertyListFiles.html
I just recreated the files (with empty content) it asked for in the paths it asked for them, since I am new to XCode and it didn't seem to affect my current project I decided that was a acceptable solution/shortcut to proceed.
The solution for this particular instance of the error was “Info.plist couldn't be opened because there is no such file” was that I had deleted all of the files in the "Project Tests" folder, but was still had "Project Tests" listed under my targets. After deleting the "tests" target, the project built successfully.
I got this error when i pulled my cohort's changes to my local so that i can review and test them. I checked all settings suggested in this thread but they all looked correct-ish. My fix was just to blow away the branch, reset to master and pull the updates to a clean branch. The ol' reboot everything technique.
Related
I am using php-intellisense extension for my Visual Studio Code.
How do I exclude other folders from being parsed by this extension? As of now it only excludes node_modules and vendor folder.
The extension does not seem to have any specific setting so, unless I'm missing something, the only way to accomplish that is the files.exclude directive. It should definitively work with all languages because it basically makes the file or directory totally disappear from the program.
Beware though of the consequences: you won't even see the folder in the file explorer, nor will it show in searches.
There is an opened issue on the author's github. I've just added a comment to explain how to workaround it.
Please have a look to my comment: https://github.com/felixfbecker/php-language-server/issues/159#issuecomment-514581602
In brief, you can change the way the workspace files are scanned in this file :
C:\Users\USER\ .vscode\extensions\felixfbecker.php-intellisense-xxxx\vendor\felixfbecker\language-server\src\ Indexer.php
public function index(): Promise
{
return coroutine(function () {
// Old code using the rootPath
//$pattern = Path::makeAbsolute('**/*.php', $this->rootPath);
// My new pattern
$pattern = Path::makeAbsolute('**/*.php', 'C:/Users/[USER]/Projects/sources/app/code');
$uris = yield $this->filesFinder->find($pattern);
// ...
});
}
Restart VS Code after saving the changes and it will only index the needed path.
Long story short, I have two settings files that must have the same name. They're currently in separate folders, something like:
Resources/brand/dev/settings.file
Resources/brand/prod/settings.file
However I can't seem to get Swift to grab the file out, it always comes up as nil
var file = Bundle.main.path(forResource:"settings", ofType:"file", inDirectory:"Resources/brand/dev")
If I remove one of the files, and the inDirectory parameter everything works fine.
File target membership, project build phases all look OK.
Am I missing something here?
Setting files must be added to XCode with the option 'Create folder references'
I'm just trying to begin develop a game in Marmalade (6.3). But when I have made my new sources (.cpp, and .h) and added them to the mkb, and then trying to run my program, then I got an error which says that Unable to find file.cpp in path(s). It's for all of my files except the files (game.h, game.cpp, main.cpp) which were made by Marmalade when I have chosen the new 2D game project. Should I add my .cpp and .h files to anywhere else?
Thanks
It is difficult to give a categorical answer without more info. However my guess is that you've copied and pasted from an example and not understood about the syntax of the files section. Basically:
files
{
(foo)
humbug.cpp
)
The "(foo)" might look very innocent, but it actually says that humbug.cpp is actually in directory foo - relative to the mkb file. It is common practice to actually use "(source)" and put all the source files in a directory of that name - making the source layout a bit neater.
Naturally if you have (source) and don't put the files actually in directory source, they won't be found. My guess is that is what you are seeing.
Just to clarify previous answer, The format of files directive is like this -
files
{
(<Path relative to MKB>,<Alternate Path>)
["Name of the parent Group in VS/XCode project","Name of the subparent group"]
fileName.cpp
fileName.h
}
for example I have two files SoundManager.h and SoundManager.cpp in System folder of Source, while MainMenu.h and MainMenu.cpp in Source/UI. Now the files directive would be -
files
{
(Source/System)
["Source","System"] #This part is not required, it's just to arrange your files in IDE project
SoundManager.h
SoundManager.cpp
(Source/UI)
("Source","UI")
MainMenu.h
ManinMenu.cpp
}
I started doing development with google scripts few days ago and recently joined stackoverflow. I have a problem with addToFolder() function. I have the following piece of code that copies my new spreadsheet into a folder (test/sheets) in my Google Drive:
var ss = SpreadsheetApp.create("test");
var ssID = ss.getId();
DocsList.getFileById(ssID).addToFolder(DocsList.getFolder("test/sheets"));
My problem is that now I have 2 versions of the same file (one in the root of my Google Drive folder and the other in test/sheets folder), whenever I try to delete either of the copies, the other copy is deleted as well. Is there a way to delete the old file and keep the new one OR is there a way to create the file in the desired folder in first place?
EDIT :
thanks for you quick response. I played with this for couple of hours but still have problem copying the file to the destination folder. The problem is that even when I use makeCopy Method of the file, still addToFolder is the only option to mention the folder. Again this ends up having the tagged filename in the destination folder.
I had the same problem with the copy method.
Here is my new Code:
var SetLocationFile = "icompare/sheets/stocks"
var FolderID = DocsList.getFolder(SetLocationFile);
var FileID = DocsList.getFileById(ssID);
FileID.makeCopy("test3").addToFolder(FolderID);
Folders in Google Docs\Google Drive are actually tags. When you "add" a file to the folder "test/sheets", you do not make a copy of your file, you just attach the tag "test/sheets" to it. Now the same file is shown both in the "test/sheets" folder (i.e. in the list of all files with the tag "test/sheets") and in the root. If you wish to make a copy of the file, you should use the copy method. (Please let me know if I just misunderstand your question.)
I realize this is an old questions but you can simply use .removeFromFolder(DocsList.getRootFolder()); to remove the file from the root folder.
I would also like to know the answer to this question.. seems rather "weird" that the API does not even provide a way to create spreadsheets and place them in a certain map? And no, I do not want a Copy of the file, I want the file to be in a specific map and in no other map...
I've built an eclipse-based product, and I want to set the default workspace used by the Product. Currently, when the "Workspace Launcher" pops up for the first time, the default workspace location is just in the same directory as the Eclipse Product executable. I'd like to change to something like USER_HOME/myworkspace.
I can't seem to find a setting for this, but I'm guessing / hoping its a setting in my product_configuration.ini.
Cheers!
here is a more easy way
Once you have Eclipse up and running you can open Window-->Preferences-->Editors-->Startup and Shutdown. Click the first box that says Prompt for workspace on startup.
Or In your config.ini file ull've this line (or look in configuration.settings\org.eclipse.ui.ide.prefs)
//The default workspace location
Osgi.instance.area.default=#user.home/workspace
try changing this
Here is what needs to be done.
Wherever eclipse is installed go to the "configuration" directory and open the config.ini file in there.
Windows paths normally look like this:
C:\Users\Wilbert\Documents\Installers\Eclipse\eclipse
You will probably find something like this in the config.ini file:
osgi.instance.area.default=#user.home/workingspace
You need to change that to[Getting rid of the "#" and using forward slashes instead of back slash]:
osgi.instance.area.default=C:/Users/Wilbert/Documents/Programs/CS111B(Java)/Practice Programs/Projects
I just did it and it worked.
In your product (.product), go to the "Configuration" tab. Under the "Properties" section, add the property 'osgi.instance.area.default' with a value of '#user.home/myworkspace'. When you export your product, this property will be automatically added to your product's configuration file (just as ayush and Wilbert Sequeira were manually doing).
Note that only an exported product will use that configuration. When running your product in the Eclipse IDE, the workspace location will be overridden by your IDE's configurations.
The now-defunct Symbian WRT product did this. Looking through the sources, it seems to be done by a p2.inf file in the product package. See the screenshot below:
The first yellow arrow is for Windows and the second for Mac and Linux
In your .product file you can specify this as part of the programArgs element.
<programArgs>-data #user.home/MyWorkspace</programArgs>
Note that you can customize config.ini for individual platforms in the product descriptor (*.product) editor. But it never worked for me - hence that hack using P2. It may be working now as I was working with either 3.5 or early 3.6 when I last tried it.
Have a look at the following tutorial: http://hexapixel.com/2009/01/12/rcp-workspaces.
You said in your comment to the question "I just want to prepopulate the selector window with a certain default location".
You can do just that in PickWorkspaceDialog's (from the tutorial) getWorkspacePathSuggestion() method:
private String getWorkspacePathSuggestion() {
StringBuffer buf = new StringBuffer();
String uHome = System.getProperty("user.home");
if (uHome == null) {
uHome = "c:" + File.separator + "temp";
}
buf.append(uHome);
buf.append(File.separator);
buf.append("My App Name");
buf.append("_Workspace");
return buf.toString();
}
For this to work, you do have to create your own dialog though, and I can't tell if that's an option from your question...
In your .product file within the block add:
<property name="osgi.instance.area.default" value="#user.home/workspace" />
And when you build your product, the default config.ini will have this property set.
Details are in the Eclipse docs regarding the various variables.
To set the workspace location programmatically, use:
Platform.getInstanceLocation().set(new URL(...));