I using aptana studio 3, when I create the new php project, in window "Project Explorer" .htaccess file is invisible, (all other files I can see). can someone tell me, how to make this file visible in aptana projects ?
I think this other stackoverflow post will help you. A .htaccess file is also an hidden file, because of the . in front of the name in all unix systems:
How to show hidden files in Aptana's Project View?
Check it out!
Related
Is it possible to hide generated dart files in Android Studio especially *.g.dart files?
In Project panel, under Options there is a File Nesting Option. I added .chopper.dart; .freezed.dart; .g.dart to .dart parent. This will group related files under the main file.
In Settings panel, open Editor section, and select File Types. Now look for Ignore files and folders field at the bottom. Just include *.g.dart there and you're good to go!
I know from Intellij IDEA. Hide .iml files that I can hide from the Project Tool Window specific file extensions on all directories. However, I have unsuccessfully tried to hide specific files (e.g. mymodule/blah.tgz) without getting all tgz files to hide as well. In Settings -> Editor -> File Type, at the bottom, I have tried specifying full and relative paths (e.g. ~/projects/mymodules/blah.tgz) without luck.
How can I achieve this? Is this supported at all? I'm using IntelliJ 14 Ultimate.
Please see the following comment.
How to hide unnecessary files from intellij project view?
I usually use the scope support in Idea to filter in/out files/folders in project tool window and other windows, i.e. Find.
I hope this helps.
I have a weird problem in Textmate 2 that I didn't experience before. I usually open TM2 on the command line by cd'ing into the project folder, then enter mate ..
Strangely, for one project, the "Project folder" now is not the one I do mate . in, but it's my home folder. This means that pressing Cmd-T searches my whole home folder now, not only my project folder. This is very embarassing, and I can't seem to change it. I quit TM2, etc., but this didn't help. Interestingly, on other folders, it's still the "old", expected behavior.
Any idea on how to change this?
Find the folder you want to set as your Project Folder in the file browsing drawer View->Show File Browser. Use the menu button, it looks like a down arrow, select Use "[folder name]" as Project Folder.
After adding a .tm_properties file in the project folder with the following content solved the problem for me.
projectDirectory = "$CWD"
This may not be a general fix for the problem, but at least on a per-project base it's working for me.
I can't make my Dreamweaver CS6 to load sass (SCSS) files as css (it won't color it).
It was working fine on CS5.5 version. Now I have fresh DW CS6 with all updates (12.0.3) and I have modified all needed files.
Instruction is here or here.
DW still won't apply coloring to my code and when (while open scss file) I go to preferences --> code coloring, Document type highlighted is Text.
Any ideas? Maybe there are another files in CS6 I have to modify?
I found the solution. In CS6 in addition to the files listed in both tutorial (linked in the question), there is one more file that needs to be changed.
It's MMDocumentTypes.xml located in AppData files here:
C:\Users{username}\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\Dreamweaver CS6\en_US\Configuration\DocumentTypes
I had the same issue with Dreamweaver CS6.
I had to update the files in my hidden Library folder
First enable finder to show hidden files.
Open a terminal and paste the following:
defaults write com.apple.Finder AppleShowAllFiles YES
Restart Terminal:
Keep “Alt” key pressed, put mouse over “Finder icon” – your app bar and “right click”. A menu appear and click on “Relaunch”
Open Finder and go to “your folder”
Go to (open folder by folder) Library. Application Support, Adobe, Dreamweaver CS6, en_US,
Configuration
Edit the Extentions.txt and DocumentTypes/MMDocumentTypes.xml files there.
Restart Dreamweaver and you should be good to go.
Update your terminal to hide hidden files
defaults write com.apple.Finder AppleShowAllFiles NO
Full instructions are from here:
http://www.fastinfo.com.au/dreamever-syntax-highlight-for-less-and-sass/
I have PHP for FastCGI installed on Windows 7 through the Web Platform Installer. I need to edit php.ini to enable logging, but I'm not able to overwrite the existing file, apparently because something has it open and/or locked.
Stopping the server in IIS Manager doesn't help; stopping the Windows Process Activation Service and the World Wide Web Publishing Service doesn't help. phpinfo() confirms that I'm working with the correct file (C:\Program Files (x86)\PHP\php.ini). It's not marked as read only and I do have permissions for it. I'm out of ideas.
I had this problem and managed to work around it. You need to be running the editor (notepad or whatever) as an admin.
In Window Vista / Window 7, right click and choose "Run as Administrator".
Then open php.ini and edit it...
Another option is to copy the text of the file into a new file in a different location, make your changes, save the file as 'php.ini'. Then copy the new file across overwriting the old one. Explorer may handle the permissions differently.
I've had a similar problem, and I was working in windows 10 which doesn't use "run as administrator"
So this is what I did:
right click the problem file and go to properties
go to tab security
click edit, which should have a shield
select in names of groups: Users(computer specifics\Users)
in the square under it you can allow editing of the file
This causes it to allow you to edit the file for users and not run into the problem anymore. This also removes the problem in the future for this file so you can always edit it again by just opening the file in text editor.
Please note I am Dutch and that certain names are translated incorrectly.
You could use the Find Handle feature of Process Explorer (direct EXE download link), from Sysinternals (a part of Microsoft now), to find out what exactly is locking the file.
I'm sorry I can't help with your exact question, but hope that helps!
In Windows 7, right click Notepad and choose "Run as Administrator". Make sure you do not use Notepad++ as your editor. It accesses this file and therefore tells you there's is an error.
The default notepad will work fine with these instructions.
Depending on what are you trying to write to the file, you can write to an '.htaccess' file on the root of the site instead. I can provide a more specific example if you would like.
You can also use Unlocker to figure this out. A pain, but the utility is really handy anyway so it won't hurt to have it around.
1) Open CMD with administrator mostly like this.
2) Then go to "C:\Program Files\php-8.1.7" like this.
3) then paste "cd C:\Program Files\php-8.1.7" and press Enter and type
php.ini like this.
4) It will automatically open the file in a text editor or suggest to
open any editor like notepad , notepad++,vs code etc.
5) edit as you wish and save it like (ctrl + s) .Here I adding MongoDB
extension like this .And that's it.
By the way the question was asked 12 years ago but we still facing the problem
Try this:
Stop the webserver
Change the file
Start the webserver
If that doesn't work, then you are probably changing the wrong file. It's possible that the original file is elsewhere and when the server starts it copies it to C:\Program Files (x86)\PHP\php.ini. phpinfo() might be pointing to the file that is overwritten every time...