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Re: [jdt-core-dev] question about SearchEngine API
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I'm not sure to understand. Do you want the declarations of the types that
are referenced in a method, or do you want the type references in this
method?
If you want the type references in a method, you should use something
like:
IJavaSearchScope scope = SearchEngine.createJavaSearchScope(new
IJavaElement[] {method});
SearchEngine.search(workspace, "*", TYPE, REFERENCES, scope,
collector);
If you want the declarations of the types that are referenced in a method,
you should use SearchEngine.searchDeclarationsOfReferencedTypes(...).
In the case of a declaration in a jar, the collector will get the jar file
or the project as the resource, BUT it will also get an IJavaElement
corresponding to
the type declaration.
Jerome
"Adam Kiezun" <adam.kiezun@xxxxxxx>
Sent by: jdt-core-dev-admin@xxxxxxxxxxx
11/15/2001 04:20 PM
Please respond to jdt-core-dev
To: <jdt-core-dev@xxxxxxxxxxx>
cc:
Subject: Re: [jdt-core-dev] question about SearchEngine API
> So the resource would be the jar (or the project if it is an external
jar)
> and the positions would be the
> positions of the declaration 'Set' in the attached source. If there is
no
> attached source, then the positions
> would be undefined.
hmmm,
i there any other way i can figure out which types are referenced is this
or
that method? i need this for Pull up method refactoring.
i could walk the ast but that sounds like a heavy-weight solution for a
problem like this.
> But of course it doesn't work that way as captured in bug 5384 search
engine:
> behavior different than expected. This method needs to be rewritten.
:)
yes, i know
the question was more about the future functionality of these methods
thanks Jerome
a.
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