Nodeclipse does not show projects in Mint 17 64-bit - node.js

I installed Enide Studio yesterday (decompressed the zip to /opt/enide-studio and had to make eclipse executable). I then attempted to import an existing project. It seemed to successfully import, but the project explorer shows nothing (it's completely blank). I restarted the IDE, etc. -- still nothing.
Figuring it actually did not import the project, I tried again to import it this time from its git repo. I was met with the error that the project already exists in the workspace; so, it's there, but the IDE is not showing it.
I then tried creating a new Node.js project. It again seems to successfully create a project, but the UI is still white in all panels. I see the perspective buttons for JS, Node, etc., but panels like Console are also completely blank white.
Also, attempting to create an express project fails outright because it can't find express (despite installing it as directed with npm install -g express).
I've logged out and back in as well as a reboot. Still nothing...
Has anyone else encountered this and have a work-around/fix for Enide Studio?

You have too many issues put together as one.
Answering what is in question topic: "Nodeclipse does not show projects in Mint 17 64-bit"
Nodeclipse is plugin to Eclipse and displaying project in Project Explorer is implemented inside Eclipse core module called Eclipse Workbench. You can switch to other perspective e.g. Java and see that actually it displays the same list of projects.
General recommendation is to get latest Eclipse 4.4 Luna and install Nodeclipse (or get Enide Studio released after June 2014, not yet)
For other issues create separate tickets
http://www.nodeclipse.org/#support

Related

Uninstall eclipse plugin - linux

I'm developing an eclipse plugin and in order to test it I have to install it into my eclipse application regularly. However as I dont't want to change the version of my plugin every time I want to test a new feature I always uninstalled the plugin from within eclipse and afterwards I'd go to the eclipse folder and delete my plugin out of the plugins folder (and delete the respective entries in the eclipse XML-files).
That worked great in windows but I have recently switched to Linux (Mint) and I just found out that my plugin is no longer located in the plugins folder inside the eclipse program directory. Therefore I can't really delete the old plugin whcih then prevents the new version of the plugin from installing properly.
Does anyone have an idea about where eclipse copies the installed plugin or a differerent approch to actually completely uninstall (delete) an installed eclipse plugin?
Okay after searching through my whole filesystem I found it out myself.
Eclipse has a hidden folder in the home directory named .eclipse in which each installed eclipse version has it's sub-directory and in there there is also a plugins and a features folder that then contain the externally installed plugins and features.
It also contains the corresponding artifacts.xml.
I'm not sure whether this behaviour is specific to the Linux Mint OS or rather a new "feature" of Eclipse Neon but if anyone is having the same problem that's were I found it.
Help -> Installation Detail.
Then click the plugin you want removed then press "Uninstall...".
Note: there is a "Plug-ins" tab in the Installation Detail dialog. This is misleading; you are not to click it.
Ps. It might be easier to test the plugin, during development, on a run-time workbench.

Eclipse Workspace not recognized after clean install

I just made a clean install, as I do every year, of my linux system (ubuntu) on my notebook.
I just wanted to open-up eclipse from my (old) workspace, where all my code from the past 12 months is - but eclipse doesn't show a single package!
My assumption is that I used an older version of eclipse up until yesterday before the clean install, and that the version I installed today is newer, thereby doesn't recognize my worksapce(s!). Is this assumption correct? if so, Does anyone know how I can figure out which version of Eclipse I was using when working on the old Workspace, so that I can download that exact same version again?
The absolut worst-case scenario would be to c/p all classes and packages manually into the new eclipse, but it's over a 1000 classes - so that might be too time-consumming.
An help would be greatly appreciated, since there actually are 2 projects from work in those workspaces... ^^
Well, after Downloading Eclipse Mars, I found a solution. Although switching workspaces, or even importing the old workspaces didn't work, I found out that if I started eclipse from the old workspace, even though package explorer would stay empty, it would suffice to define a new java project with the exact same name of one of the projects inside the old workspace, for eclipse to instantly load-up the docs contents.
This not as much a solution, then a work-around... but still, fixed the problem!

Project is targeting frameworks not installed or are included as part of future updates to Visual Studio

I am attempting to convert the Microsoft.Health C# class library that is installed as part of the HealthVault SDK, using instructions provided here. After following these instructions, I get the following error when attempting to load the project into Visual Studio 2013.
"The project is targeting frameworks hat are either not installed or
are included as part of future updates to Visual Studio. See
http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=287985"
Visiting the link takes me to .NET SDKs and Downloads. Once there, I have no clue on what needs to be done.
I do realize that one will have to leverage the Portable Class Library Contrib project to fill in some missing bits, especially code related to System.Security. This, I will deal with later.
Any one run into a similar problem?
Maybe so late but for those who have the same problem.
I had the same error in a project which was working perfect before updating VS2013 and finally after 3 hours looking for the source of the error I found that the error is about TargetFrameworkProfile.
In my case I sloved it like so:
Right click in the unloaded project in your solution and click Edit.
Find the TargetFrameworkProfile tag and set it as below:
<TargetFrameworkProfile>Profile78</TargetFrameworkProfile>
At a guess, this is because you need to specify the TargetFrameworkVersion and TargetFrameworkProfile properties in the project file. Compare the .csproj you are trying to create to a newly created PCL project file, and make sure that everything that's not specific to your project matches.
I ran into the same issue and got it resolved by installing the latest Visual Studio Update

orchard cms: module package not installing

Setup:
I have created a module that works fine in the solution where it was created, ie, the orchard source code. I then package it up using package create.
Edit: I now realize that the problem appeared IMMEDIATELY after installing visual studio 2012.
Problem:
If I now install the module on a different app using the package and install from file, all the alerts show the module is installed, it appears in the features list, it is enabled... but there are no menu items, no entry in the migrations table, nothing.
Edit: Nothing appears in the logs. The files are, however, installed correctly in the modules folder of the site.
Question:
What could be going wrong that stops the module being properly installed using the package given that the module works fine in the source code solution where it was created??
Any suggestions?
Edit:
How could installing visual studio 2012 have affected Orchard?
I notice that installing visual studio 2012 resulted in various bits of sql server 2012 being installed at the same time. Could this be relevant? EG, is this why the migrations code never runs?
Edit on the basis of Bertrand Le Roy's comments (see below this question):
BertrandLeRoy says that having ASP.NET MVC 4 installed in the GAC, as well as Razor 2 (both of which came with VS 2012), is the problem.
He suggests upgrading to Orchard 1.5.x.
However:
I have tried using a new install of Orchard 1.5.1, and the problem is the same:
Creating a new module using VS 2012 and Source Code for Orchard 1.5.1 and the module appears correctly when running the orchard site from VS.
Creating a package and then installing that into an Orchard 1.5.1 site, eg, using WebMatrix, running and then installing the package has the following effect:
2.1. The alerts in the dashboard tell me that the package has installed correctly.
2.2. However, enabling the feature does nothing.
2.3. This is hardly surprising, as installing the package has not even run the migrations.
The last test I can do is to see if the package runs on a web server that doesn't have asp.net mvc4 installed. I will post back once that is done.
However, the main point is that using Orchard 1.5.1 produces the exact same result. So, if the problem really is the fact that MVC 4 and Razor 2 are on the machine, then Orchard 1.5.1 is not solving it.
Ie, what will happen when I install mvc 4 on the web server as I will inevitably have to for other, non Orchard apps?
I experienced the same thing on version 1.8.1. That is, the module appeared to install fine, but it didn't actually perform migrations or load correctly.
Initially, I saw nothing in the log to indicate a problem. However, after adjusting the /Config/log4net.config file to log ALL instead of just ERROR messages. I got this:
... Orchard.Environment.Extensions.Loaders.PrecompiledExtensionLoader -
- Extension "Transformalize" will not be loaded as pre-compiled extension
because one or more referenced extension is dynamically compiled
The part saying my module "will not be loaded as pre-compiled extension because one or more referenced extension is dynamically compiled" seemed to explain why my module wasn't loading. So, I Googled and found this documentation regarding the Orchard module loader and dynamic compilation. It's a bit complicated at 2 AM, but what I gathered is my module's reference to another module (Orchard.Autoroute in this case) caused the log message (above) in the production environment. I removed my module's reference and dependency on Orchard.Autoroute, and then it installed fine.
The documentation explains how modules are dynamically compiled and how the settings in /Config/HostComponents.config can change how things work.

Problems creating a Java Mobile Application project

I have installed the Netbeans 6.7 IDE with Java ME included, but cannot create a Mobile Application project from the Java ME category. When I select the project type the wizard stops at "Finding Feature" with the message:
Not all requested modules can be enabled:
[StandardModule:org.netbeans.modules.mobility.end2end.kig jarFile:C:\Program Files\NetBeans 6.7\mobility8\modules\org-netbeans-modules-mobility-end2end-kit.jar.
I am attempting to run this on Vista Home Premium. I have tried to run the IDE as Administrator with no luck.
I am at a loss for where to go next as I cannot seem to find any information regarding this issue. Even if you don't have the solution any insight into this error message would be helpful.
I am unable so far to get the project running via the Netbeans IDE install. I have, for the time being, installed the Java ME SDK which includes a very stripped down version of the Netbeans IDE for mobile development.
I originally had some issues starting the SDK as well on Vista. The IDE reported that it could not connect to the device manager on localhost. After some searching I found this link: Java ME SDK Startup Problem which suggests changing the hosts file localhost entry from IPv6 to IPv4. The fix worked perfectly and I can now compile and run code in the emulator.
This is not an optimal solution as the SDK does not include the visual design tools, however I am able to get a basic project going in the mean time.
I have given up on the 6.7 version and have instead located and installed 6.5.1. This previous version has been working just fine and seems to do everything I need.
I ran into the exact same error today while installing NB 6.8 beta. To resolve it we need to install two plugins:
Java Web Applications (as mentioned by Ali above) and
Sun Java System Web Server 7.0
Note that these two are part of the Category called "Java Web and EE" hence the confusion that we need to install Glassfish App Server. But we need these two plugins because they are required for debugging using breakpoints in emulator. Netbeans runs a web server when we do breakpoint based debugging.
Also note that the Java Web applications needs SOAP Web Services and JavaScript Debugger plugins to run and so these plugins are also installed when you try to install it.
You also need to install "Java Web Applications" plugin.
Tools->Plugins->Available Plugins
If the module is present, you should try unzipping it to check its content makes sense.
You should also be able to rebuild it from Netbeans sources.
You can also try to figure out why this happens by debugging the module loader inside Netbeans from its sources, using another IDE, presumably the latest version of Netbeans you can find without the issue.
If the module is missing, you might want to get the missing jar file from an installation of a previous version of Netbeans, see if it is compatible.
6.5.1 isn't missing any module.
back in version 5.5, the mobility module had to be downloaded and installed separately from the main IDE.
If you want to consider using Eclipse for developing your J2ME app...I've written a post related to that some time ago: here.

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