Sergey,
Can you explain a bit more…
>>>> Why would you need a specific project in the global settings?
I want to specify set of projects that will be used for source lookup for all my launch configurations.
CDT used to work that way. Why is that changed?
I am not sure I understand what you mean by:
>>>> The project that gets added in the global settings is the one that the launch configuration is attached to
It make sense the project that I specific in the main tab of my launch configuration to be used as part for source lookup.
Why would I need to add it to the global preference? How will that make a difference if I add a project or I don’t add a project container to the global preference?
I’m pretty puzzled…
Thanks
Dobrin
From: cdt-dev-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:cdt-dev-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Sergey Prigogin
Sent: Thursday, February 03, 2011 1:52 PM
To: CDT General developers list.
Subject: Re: [cdt-dev] global source lookup
The project that gets added in the global settings is the one that the launch configuration is attached to. Why would you need a specific project in the global settings?
-sergey
On Thu, Feb 3, 2011 at 10:43 AM, Alexiev, Dobrin <dalexiev@xxxxxx> wrote:
Hello,
I wanted to add a project to my global source Lookup.
In the preference page: “C/C++ -> Debug -> Source Lookup Path” I clicked on the “Add” button.
In the “Add Source” dialog I selected the “project” item and clicked “OK”.
A new dialog “Referenced Project” popped up asking me about referenced project.
When I click “OK” a new item called “Project” appeared in my “Source Lookup Path” preference page, but I was never asked to specify the project !!!
If I select the “project” item the Edit button in the page is disabled.
Is there something I am missing.
This used to work well – I was able to specify the project in the past.
Thanks
Dobrin
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