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Re: how to find plugin and its id [message #328808 is a reply to message #328796] |
Wed, 04 June 2008 12:48 |
Eclipse User |
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Originally posted by: merks.ca.ibm.com
Hao,
The PDE perspective has some nice views for this kind of thing. Also
Help->About Eclipse SDK provides this information. Running with -clean
-debug will produce helpful logged details about plugin activation and
why plugins are disabled (although -debug was broken in RC2 I think it's
fixed now in RC3).
hao wrote:
> Either pro·gram·mat·i·cal·ly or using some tools to find all of plugin
> and their Ids is fine for me. There are 2 reasons we need to find
> plugin and its Id:
> 1. If we use a plugin in our application and some error happens, we
> need to know where the error happens. Since a plugin may depends on a
> set of other plugins which in turn depend on another set of plugins,
> and etc.. It looks like the existing eclipse tool does not provide all
> plugin information, especially for un-successfully loaded plugins
> which are almost the problem source.
> 2. You heard of some name of useful plugins but do not know the
> information about it and tried to find if the plugin exists in eclipse
> platform, it will be helpful to see all of the plugins include their
> name, provider, id and etc.
>
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Re: how to find plugin and its id [message #328823 is a reply to message #328821] |
Wed, 04 June 2008 14:51 |
Eclipse User |
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Originally posted by: merks.ca.ibm.com
Hao,
That's not a plugin. That class is in
org.eclipse.ui.navigator.resources. If you do Window->Show
View-Other...->PDE->Plugin-ins, select them all, and use Add To Java
Search, it will be easier to find classes. You could create a plugin
that depends on all other plugins and then the little right left
navigator button in the navigator/explorer will locate the file its
plugin...
hao wrote:
> Help->About is not very helpful. For example,
> org.eclipse.ui.navigator.ProjectExplorer is even not shown there.
>
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Re: how to find plugin and its id [message #328831 is a reply to message #328823] |
Wed, 04 June 2008 16:30 |
Eclipse User |
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Originally posted by: eclipse-news.rizzoweb.com
Ed Merks wrote:
> Hao,
>
> That's not a plugin. That class is in
> org.eclipse.ui.navigator.resources. If you do Window->Show
> View-Other...->PDE->Plugin-ins, select them all, and use Add To Java
> Search, it will be easier to find classes. You could create a plugin
> that depends on all other plugins and then the little right left
> navigator button in the navigator/explorer will locate the file its
> plugin...
To make this last suggestion a lot easier, get the "Reference Project"
tool from http://www.qualityeclipse.com/
This tool makes it easy to include all installed Eclipse plugins
available for things like Ctrl+Shift+T and Java Search.
From the web page:
"Our approach, useful for searching and supporting multiple versions of
Eclipse at the same time, is to create one reference project for each
version of Eclipse to be searched. This project contains no source of
its own, but contains all the Eclipse plug-ins on its classpath so that
a search can include the entire source for Eclipse. To include or
exclude a particular version of Eclipse in your searches, simply open or
close the corresponding reference project."
Hope this helps,
Eric
> hao wrote:
>> Help->About is not very helpful. For example,
>> org.eclipse.ui.navigator.ProjectExplorer is even not shown there.
>>
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Re: how to find plugin and its id [message #328906 is a reply to message #328889] |
Fri, 06 June 2008 13:55 |
Eclipse User |
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Originally posted by: eclipse-news.rizzoweb.com
hao wrote:
> The reference project does not contain all plugins. It only contains the
> plugins which are under the plugin installation root directory required
> when the reference project is created.
>
First, please quote the message to which you are responding - there are
many threads to read every day and we can not all remember what was said
previously.
Second, I don't understand what you are expecting. What plugins would
you expect to be included that aren't installed when you create the
reference project. Please provide a specific scenario you are trying,
what you expect to get, and how that differs from what you actually get.
Eric
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Re: how to find plugin and its id [message #328965 is a reply to message #328949] |
Mon, 09 June 2008 13:13 |
Eclipse User |
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Originally posted by: eclipse-news.rizzoweb.com
hao wrote:
> Eric said.
>
>> I don't understand what you are expecting. What plugins would you
>> expect to
> be included that aren't installed when you create the reference project.
> Please provide a specific scenario you are trying, what you expect to
> get, and how that differs from what you actually get.
>
> What I tried to say is that the reference project you mentioned (>get
> the "Reference Project" tool from http://www.qualityeclipse.com/) is not
> quite useful beacuse it only lists the plugins from a specified plugin
> installation directory. If the plugin installation directory is known, I
> am not sure if I need the tool to find a plugin. If the tool could
> automatically find all plug-ins installed in a eclipse platform and list
> all of them in a UI, then the tool will be useful.
I pointed it out in response to someone who suggested creating a project
that referenced all plugins on its classpath. The tool is useful as a
reference, not a "table of contents." With such a project in your
workspace, all of the referenced plugins will be included in things like
Open Type dialog, Java search, etc.
If you want to browse the plugins that are currently installed, I think
Wayne (or someone) already pointed out the Plug-in Registry view and
Plugin Spy.
Hope this helps,
Eric
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