I'm currently using VSCode as my main editor, however, when I split the editor into 2, it opens the same file twice, like left & right (see image below).
Is there any way to prevent it from opening the same file on the next editor? Currently, I have my custom settings and can be copied from here.
command name in Keybindings: workbench.action.moveEditorToNextGroup
command name in Command Palette: View: Move Editor into Next Group
default keybinding: Ctrl+Alt+→
command name in Keybindings:workbench.action.moveEditorToPreviousGroup
command name in Command Palette: View: Move Editor into Previous Group
default keybinding: Ctrl+Alt+←
Related
I am facing a problem with my visual studio 2013 ultimate. i would run a open cv project but iam getting a error message like this " opencv_core249d.lib" missing from ur computer. re install the program.
Solution : It works with eclipse Version: Mars.2 Release (4.5.2).
This is a missing .dll issue, not a missing lib issue. It usually occurs when the Environment Variables have not been correctly set in your Windows environment. To take care of this problem, there are 2 methods:
1) edit Environment variables
Go to ‘My Computer’ , right-click and select ‘Properties’. A window called ‘System’ will open, containing the Windows Logo on the right. On the left margin of this window, you will find a link named ‘Advance system
settings’. Click on it.
Another window called ’System Properties’ will open. On the bottom right corner of this window, click on the button named ’Environment Variables..’.
Under the ‘System variables’ column, look for a variable by the name ‘Path’. - Select ‘Path’ and click ‘Edit..’
In the ‘variable value’ row, add the following address:
\path to\opencv\build\x86\vc12\bin;
Please Note- Ensure that the new address added by you, and the address previously written in the ‘variable value’ row, are separated by a ; DO NOT REMOVE the previous environment variable addresses.
2) Manually copy the .dll files.
In case the first approach does not work for you, go to:
\path to\opencv\build\x86\vc12\bin;
You'll find all the dll files that you're looking for. Copy those files to directory where your source code is located.
I want to find Auto-Alignment Shortcut Key in Keil uVision. I tried some shortcut keys but I can not find. In Visual Studio I used to: CTRL + K + D , but in keil uVision I don't know how it is work.
For example :
When you type below ( usually copied from another text file which was not tabified correctly):
Use the shortcut key Auto Alignment with this block of code can auto formatting your code as below :
Stop searching. There is no such feature.
Was able to align in uVision5 with Astyle (http://astyle.sourceforge.net/).
File must be saved so that this tool can do its work.
Instructions :
Copy the Astyle.exe file to the Keil installation directory (e.g. D:/Keil_v5/)
Then open Keil and under the Tools menu, open the Customize Tools Menu option.
Create a new Menu Content, the name can be casual .
Command selects the Astyle.exe file in the keil installation directory.
Fill in Arguments !E
You can add a shortcut key for the operation in Edit.
Cheers to this https://www.programmersought.com/article/578892324/
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I have found out how to add right-click context menu items to files on Windows Explorer, by adding keys to the registry. I.e. I can right-click on a file in Explorer and run a custom app against that file.
I would like to do the same for a folder and have not found a way to do that (yet). I see articles on creating/writing custom context menu handlers, but I would rather not go there.
I have found an article here on how to add cascading context menu items to the Desktop and to the "Computer" in Explorer, but this does not work for any folder.
I would like to be able to add my custom app to the context menu and have it work on both files and folders. Is there a way to do this without writing a context menu handler?
I found the solution in the below article, which describes how to do this via the registry for files, as well as for folders:
How to Add Any Application Shortcut to Windows Explorer’s Context Menu
The following two articles provided additional info and options:
Ultimate Tutorial to Customize Desktop Context Menu in Windows Vista, 7 and 8
Add Cascading Menus for Your Favorite Programs in Windows 7 Desktop and My Computer Context Menus
In the registration editor (regedit.exe) find:
Context menu for right click on folders in left panel of Windows Explorer or on background of a directory in right panel:
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\Background\shell if you are administrator
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\directory\Background\shell if you are a normal user
Context menu for right click on folders in right panel of Windows Explorer:
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell if you are administrator
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\directory\shell if you are a normal user
Context menu for any file:
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\*\shell if you are administrator
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\*\shell if you are a normal user
In all cases:
add a new key under shell, naming it as you want to name the
context menu item
add a new key inside this key, named command (mandatory name)
edit the default property in command to
myprogrampath\path\path\executable.exe "%1" to pass the file path and
name of the selected file to your custom program (for .../Directory/Background and .../directory/Background cases use %V instead of %1)
More customization:
Add icon: add a string value named icon for key created at step 1 with value matching an icon resource path. You can also provide an integer arguments to specify which icon to use. Example: %SystemRoot%\System32\shell32.dll,3
Display only on shift-click: add an empty string value named Extended for key created at step 1
Customize menu entry label: change the value of default value for key created at step 1
Change menu entry location: add a string value named Position with one of: Top, Bottom
Found a cleaner, easier and faster solution: create a text file, fill it with these contents, update it to your needs, save with .reg suffix and launch it (it does not need administrator priviliges because it accesses user-part of the registry):
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
; Setup context menu item for click on right panel:
[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\directory\Background\shell\MenuItemNameBackground\command]
#="C:\\yourpath\\executable.exe \"%1\""
; Optional: specify an icon for the item:
; HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\directory\Background\shell\MenuItemNameBackground]
;"icon"="C:\\yourpath\\appicon.ico"
; Optional: specify a position in the menu
; HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\directory\Background\shell\MenuItemNameBackground]
;"position"="Bottom"
; -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Setup context menu item for click on folders tree item:
[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\directory\shell\MenuItemNamePanel\command]
#="C:\\yourpath\\executable.exe \"%1\""
; Optional: specify an icon for the item:
; [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\directory\shell\MenuItemNamePanel]
;"icon"="C:\\yourpath\\appicon.ico"
; Optional: specify a position in the menu
; [HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\directory\shell\MenuItemNamePanel]
;"position"="Top"
In this way you can also have a backup of your configuration: just save the .reg file in a safe place. If you manually edit the registry after launching the file, right-click and slect "export".
Beware of double backspaces in path: \\
I went back and also answered this in another topic since there doesn't appear to be much on this question specifically.
I found the simplest way was to add a String Value to the key called "AppliesTo" and set its value to "under:{path}"
In my example, I want it to only look in the T Drive, so my String value is "AppliesTo":"under:T:".
In C#, this is easily accomplished with the following:
RegistryKey _key = Registry.ClassesRoot.OpenSubKey("Folder\\Shell", true);
RegistryKey newkey = _key.CreateSubKey("My Menu Item");
newkey.SetValue("AppliesTo", "under:T:");
RegistryKey subNewkey = newkey.CreateSubKey("Command");
subNewkey.SetValue("", "C:\\yourApplication.exe");
subNewkey.Close();
newkey.Close();
_key.Close();
The only good solution I found a really working is : https://superuser.com/questions/1097054/shell-context-menu-registry-extension-doesnt-work-when-default-program-is-other
Add keys in HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\SystemFileAssociations\your.extension\shell\command
Modify the last key with the command you wanna do.
For my purpose it was :
"C:\Program Files (x86)\GPSBabel\gpsbabel.exe" -r -i gpx -f "%1" -x simplify,count=1000 -o gpx -F "%1.gpx"
If I export the it I get a .reg :
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\SystemFileAssociations\.gpx\shell\Simplify gpx\command]
#="\"C:\\Program Files (x86)\\GPSBabel\\gpsbabel.exe\" -r -i gpx -f \"%1\" -x simplify,count=1000 -o gpx -F \"%1.gpx\""
Open command prompt [run as administrator] and execute this command
reg add "HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell\Refi2\command" /d "powershell.exe -noexit -command Set-Location -literalPath '%V'"
-d : value to execute[app name exe].
-v : creates a new subkey inside the command key.
-f : to forcefully override the key if already exists.
powershell.exe -noexit -command Set-Location -literalPath '%V' instead of this you can specify path of your exe.
For more details about more features run:-
reg add /?
I'm just wondering if there is some IDE command line parameter which would open a source file on a specified line (in the current view) ?
I know this is probably too much to publish as a command line parameter, but it would be great for my Assert logging system; I would just create a link (label or something) and through this link open the file on the line where the assertion has happened.
The only thing I found is the registry entry (valid for Delphi 2007)
Key:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Borland\BDS\5.0\Closed Files\
Value:
TSourceModule,'<FilePath>',0,<PositionX>,<PositionY>,<CursorX>,<CursorY>,0,0,,
Where:
<FilePath> - the full file path
<PositionX> - first visible char in horizontal scope
<PositionY> - first visible char in vertical scope
<CursorX> - cursor position in horizontal scope
<CursorY> - cursor position in vertical scope
The rest of this key value I don't know but it might be enough to create this key and open the file.
Thanks
Following discussion in the comments to the question, it appears that you would be satisfied with writing a small utility to generate a fake .dsk file (desktop file) and possibly a matching fake .dproj file (project file). The .dsk file would contain just enough information to trick the IDE into opening the required file and moving to the desired location within that file.
I can add a new item for the folders right click menu using registry:
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\folder\shell\Your item name
But i don't know how to set a icon for created item like this :
May somebody help me?
To create a custom context menu with an icon when clicking on a folder follow these steps:
Under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\folder\shell\ create a new key: "MyContextMenu"
Under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\folder\shell\MyContextMenu edit the (Default) key to specify the text to show in the context menu: MyMenu
To execute a command when the menu is chosen add a new key name "Command" and set the commmand to execute in it's (Default) value. For instance: cmd.exe
Now to set the icon you add a new string value name Icon and set it's value to the *.ico you want to show or you can reference an ico that is embedded in a dll using [name of the dll],[icon number] A lot of the default windows icons are in imageres.dll. So for this example set the value to: c:\windows\system32\imageres.dll,10
There is a nice tool called iconviewer that you can use to examine icons in dlls. After you install it you can right click a dll, open it's properties and an extra tab with it's icons will be added to the propery pages
You should to add iconpath in this key for showing when the user clicked right button.
Try to write key OpenWithProgIds, and then create value with name (path) of your application.
Example for recycle:
TRegistry *key=new TRegistry(KEY_ALL_ACCESS);
key->RootKey=HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE;
key->OpenKey("Software\\Classes\\CLSID\\{645FF040-5081-101B-9F08-00AA002F954E}\\shell", false);
key->OpenKey("Prog_name", true);
key->WriteString("Icon", ExtractFileDir(Application->ExeName)+"\\icon_prog.ico");
key->OpenKey("command", true);
key->WriteString("", ExtractFileDir(Application->ExeName)+"\\Program.exe");
key->CloseKey();