See attachement, how can I make IntelliJ download the source code from Maven in a Play Project? I know Play 2.0 uses sbt, but as I have understood sbt also uses the Maven repository infrastructure.
I guess you need to create IntelliJ IDEA project with sources attached?
If that's the case then you can run
idea with-sources
command to make play console generate all the files required for IDEA and then open generated project. Quite possible that latest trunk of play 2.0 is required for that.
Since play 2.0.1 please note that it's
idea sources
I am using Play 2.2 there are two ways
If you are in the play console, I.e you have run "play" in your play project you use
idea with-sources=yes
If you have not launched the play console it is then
play idea sources
obviously you can substitute idea for eclipse if you are using eclipse ide
Related
iam actually trying to get opencv running on my Computer. I allready configured the environment variables on Windows and added the Path for the includes and the libraries in a propertiesheet.
Now when i want to add additional dependencies i watched into my directory (opencv\build\x64\vs12\lib)and there are only two files. opencv_world310.lib and opencv_world310d.lib. So they are on my HDD.
I think these are the files i have to add?
I did this and then i got the error LNK1104 could not open "opencv_world310d.lib. Same with opencv_world310.lib.
Iam trying to build a example-code from opencv so there should be everything fine with it. I saw some Tutorials they did not have any issue. But they used OpenCv3.0
Is there any workaround?
kind regards
Yes. By default, opencv_world310.lib is the only file you should link with.
Or if you're building with Debug configuration, you should use opencv_world310d.lib instead.
Since the error code is LNK1104, I believe your additional library path is something wrong.
And then please check you are building x64 code not win32 code.
I've installed the CLI tools.
Now what do you do in order to make a plugin.
I've tried looking at the guides however I can't figure out exactly what to do?
I'm also puzzled as to where you create the plugin whether It's on The Command Prompt or Node.js or the Smartface Studio itself.
To create a plugin, you need native environment from the system. In your case, XCode.
My reccomendation to learn plugins is this tutorial by Smartface Team: https://www.smartface.io/developer/guides/plugins/hello-world-with-ios-plugin/
This is the most basic plugin you could write, but it still shows the fundamentals of plugin writing for Smartface.
P.S. You will need a Mac to develop iOS plugins (just to be sure that you know that).
Hope that helps! :)
EDIT
I was revisiting this question and I realized that I was very vague...
To answer your question, you have to develop your plugin in Native Environment (as I said), and when you build it's package, you have to put it in the same directory of the other files you'll need (PluginConfig and all of that), and run, in command prompt, the command to make the output.zip file.
Now it's better :)
First of all I'd like to start by saying that I'm actually a .Net programmer, and it so happens that I need to develop a J2ME app again today. I've have had innumerable problems developing J2ME apps with Netbeans in the past, to the extent that I have had to use someone else's laptop to do the job.
Today I installed Netbeans 7.3. Clean install. I installed the WTK 2.5.2 right afterwards. I managed to configure the platform on Netbeans and all, but once I make a J2ME app and run it I'm getting the following error message:
"Classpath to J2ME Ant extension library (libs.j2me_ant_ext.classpath property) is not set."
Trust me this is quite upsetting since I've looked it up on the net, and it seems the menu items to solve that problem that people have been pointing out to DO NOT EXIST in Netbeans 7.3.
I added an ANT variable: libs.j2me_ant_ext.classpath and set it to C:\Program Files\NetBeans 7.3\mobility\ant\nblib
Still not working. I'm not even sure if that's the correct path, if those are the correct files.
This is extremely frustrating. Can somebody please help?
I've encountered similar problem with nb 7.2.1, it's probably a bug which destroys a part of .properties file in those versions.
Fix your properties in file %project_folder%\nbproject\project.properties (you can copy them from such files in similar healthy projects)
I've developed a PhoneGap application that I intend to deploy to my BlackBerry Bold 9700. My development tools includes NotePad++, Apache Ant, Sun JDK and BlackBerry WebWorks SDK as dictated on this page here http://www.phonegap.com/start#blackberry.
I applied for Signing Keys from the Blackberry website and received a .CSI file via email. The email offers instructions for various ways of processing the .CSI file, but none of the ways explain how to do it with the current tools I have installed.
Is there an easy way to proceed with my .CSI file without installing Eclipse, Visual Studio or any other IDE? If so, can someone dictate step by step what to do?
I hope you got the solution for that. I was having the same issues. I hope my solution will work for anyone.
After getting the *.csi files from blackberry, you need to install them on your computer.
For those of you who are using Ant to build applications which described here http://www.phonegap.com/start#blackberry.
this will work you.
For installing the *.csi files in your computer you need SignatureTool.jar . This is located in your c:\BBWP\bin directory.
Next copy all the *.csi files to the above directory and run this command from the terminal in sequence.
c:\BBWP\bin>SignatureTool.jar client-RBB-2053305203.csi
c:\BBWP\bin>SignatureTool.jar client-RCR-2053305203.csi
c:\BBWP\bin>SignatureTool.jar client-RRT-2053305203.csi
If you don't have a private key installed you need to create one. And use the pin number which you used during the registration process. The installation is easy you will not have any problems with it.
Hope it helps anyone
Thank you
Try BlackBerry Ant tools. It uses ant so you need it, but this is fairly lightweight.
Look at "Signing your smartphone application" to get you started
I am using JDom jar and I want to add to my blackberry project. I am using eclipse plugins for blacberry. while building blackberry app from eclipse the error is displayed on the console as
"JDOMAbout$info:error!missing stack map #label.... "
rapc falied for the project along with this several warnings are also displayed ...so any body have came across this ?
The stack map is part of what's generated when a jar file is preverified. Sounds like your jar is not J2ME ready. Assuming it's compatible with J2ME, the standard way is to create a .cod file from the .jar, and reference that in your project. Unfortunately you can't do that with the Eclipse plugin, but once you have the .cod, you can reference it in your Eclipse project.
You have to create a Blackberry archive or library project (or whatever it's called) and add your library to that, then reference it from your application project. You may or may not have to use the Blackberry JDE to do some hackery with the jdp file as well, but I can assure it works in Eclipse. We had the kSOAP library included in ours and Eclipse would 'build' it with rapc and generate the proper files (you sort of have to do it manually, by telling the project to build).
I unfortunately don't have an environment to check things right now, but the basic idea was have a second project, include the jar, and then reference that.
All that, and the jar has to be J2ME compatible.
Maybe You can find something useful and more J2ME friendly in kDom package of kXML project
Tutorial: How To Use 3rd Party Libraries in your Applications