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Re: [m2e-users] Cannot edit filtered source files
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Igor, for me it makes no difference. Not being able to Refactor, Format, Organize Import make use of Eclipse ridiculous. So I either have to drop Maven, or source filtering.
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Igor Fedorenko [mailto:igor@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Gesendet: Dienstag, 3. Juli 2012 14:06
An: Markus Karg
Cc: Maven Integration for Eclipse users mailing list
Betreff: Re: AW: [m2e-users] Cannot edit filtered source files
Let me put it differently -- filtered java sources are not fully supported. You will still get your classes compiled and the code will most likely run, but you won't get full ide functionality. Definitely avoid filtered java sources if you can, but it will still kinda work if you absolutely must use them.
--
Regards,
Igor
On 12-07-03 8:00 AM, Markus Karg wrote:
> To sum it up in shorter words: "m2e is definitively not able to deal with filtering of Java source files by intention."
>
> Right?
>
> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
> Von: Igor Fedorenko [mailto:igor@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
> Gesendet: Dienstag, 3. Juli 2012 13:55
> An: Maven Integration for Eclipse users mailing list
> Cc: Markus Karg
> Betreff: Re: [m2e-users] Cannot edit filtered source files
>
> You are explicitly telling Maven and therefor m2e and jdt NOT to look at original java sources but use filtered sources instead. The behaviour you see is fully expected and it is not currently possible to enable full JDT support for original java sources while compiling filtered sources.
>
> --
> Regards,
> Igor
>
> On 12-07-03 7:49 AM, Markus Karg wrote:
>> Yes but my question was not if there is a more common solution but how m2e is intended to work when using filtered sources (or whether one must not use filtered sources definitively).
>>
>> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
>> Von: m2e-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx
>> [mailto:m2e-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx] Im Auftrag von Igor Fedorenko
>> Gesendet: Dienstag, 3. Juli 2012 13:46
>> An: m2e-users@xxxxxxxxxxx
>> Betreff: Re: [m2e-users] Cannot edit filtered source files
>>
>> I think it is more common to use filtered properties file to access project version and other attributes at runtime.
>>
>> --
>> Regards,
>> Igor
>>
>> On 12-07-03 6:32 AM, Markus Karg wrote:
>>> What I actually want to achieve is:
>>>
>>> * I can edit a Java file in Eclipse using JDT.
>>> * When Maven is compiling it (mvn compile) it shall replace ${project.version} placeholders found in the java source (those are needed e. g. to display the current version in the splash screen and about dialog of my application).
>>>
>>> Isn't the solution I implemented the correct way to do this in mvn / m2e?
>>>
>>> Thanks!
>>> Markus
>>>
>>> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
>>> Von: m2e-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx
>>> [mailto:m2e-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx] Im Auftrag von Rafal Krzewski
>>> Gesendet: Dienstag, 3. Juli 2012 12:17
>>> An: Maven Integration for Eclipse users mailing list
>>> Betreff: Re: [m2e-users] Cannot edit filtered source files
>>>
>>> Well, you are asking for the raw (unfiltered) source files to be on the classpath (so that JDT can work on them) and NOT be on the classpath at the same time, so that they don't clash with the filtering output.
>>> Obviously this cannot work. Why are you trying to filter the sources in the first place?
>>>
>>> regards,
>>> Rafał
>>>
>>> On Tue 03 Jul 2012 08:49:18 AM CEST, Markus Karg wrote:
>>>> Hello m2e Community,
>>>>
>>>> I have a problem with filtered source files and I hope you know how
>>>> to fix it.
>>>>
>>>> I am editing a simple Java project in Eclipse which worked rather
>>>> well until I enabled to filter resources by the following POM entry:
>>>>
>>>> <sourceDirectory>target/filtered-sources/java</sourceDirectory>
>>>>
>>>> <resources>
>>>>
>>>> <resource>
>>>>
>>>> <directory>src/main/resources</directory>
>>>>
>>>> </resource>
>>>>
>>>> <resource>
>>>>
>>>> <directory>src/main/java</directory>
>>>>
>>>> <filtering>true</filtering>
>>>>
>>>> <targetPath>../filtered-sources/java</targetPath>
>>>>
>>>> </resource>
>>>>
>>>> </resources>
>>>>
>>>> After “Maven > Update Project…” the situation in Eclipse is:
>>>>
>>>> ·/target/filtered-sources/java is correctly treated as a derived
>>>> source file, i. e. Eclipse warns that all changes are lost as the
>>>> file gets recreated automatically by the filtering. I think this is
>>>> OK and wanted.
>>>>
>>>> ·But: /src/main/java’s content is shown with a different (shallow) “J”
>>>> icon, and Eclipse cannot apply neither “Organize Import” nor
>>>> “Source
>>>>> Format” operations. For example, when trying “Organize Import”,
>>>> Eclipse Indigo says “The resource is not on the build path of a
>>>> Java project.”. Well, in fact, it actually IS on the build path,
>>>> but it is EXCLUDED by “**” by m2e (at least the package explorer tells me).
>>>> This means, all the nice JDT gimmicks are switched off!
>>>>
>>>> So editing the original source is rather impossible now! I do not
>>>> believe that it is wanted by m2e that I cannot use any of the JDT
>>>> gimmicks?
>>>>
>>>> What am I doing wrong?
>>>>
>>>> Thanks!
>>>>
>>>> Markus
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> m2e-users mailing list
>>>> m2e-users@xxxxxxxxxxx
>>>> https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/m2e-users
>>>
>>>
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>>
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