The Java Developer's Guide to Eclipse, 2/e
內容描述
Table
of Contents:
Foreword.
Preface.
Origin of the Book.
Goals.
Intended Audience and Prerequisites.
How the Book Is Organized.
Coding Conventions.
CD-ROM.
Where to Find Further Information.
Guide to Reading
This Book.
Acknowledgments.
About the
Authors.
- Read Me
First.
Eclipse as a Host for Application Development
Tools.
Beyond Tools: Eclipse as a Host for Client
Applications.
What Is Eclipse?
Getting and Installing Eclipse.
Chapter Summary.
References.
I. USING
ECLIPSE. - Getting
Started with Eclipse.
Your First Steps.
Basic Eclipse Use.
Resource Management.
Customizing Eclipse.
Exercise Summary.
Chapter Summary.
Reference. - Using Java
Development Tools.
Getting Started with JDT.
Writing Java Code.
Working with Java Elements.
Tuning the Performance of the JDT.
More on the JDT Views and Preferences.
Exercise Summary.
Chapter Summary.
Reference. - Running and
Debugging Java.
Running Java Code.
Debugging.
Remote Debugging.
Exercise Summary.
Chapter Summary.
Reference. - Teaming Up
with Eclipse.
Eclipse Support for CVS.
General Team Support by Eclipse.
An Overview of CVS for the Novice.
The CVS User Interface in Eclipse.
Special Situations and How to Handle Them.
Additional Features.
Exercise Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Managing Your
Eclipse Environment.
An Overview of Your Eclipse Installation.
Understanding the Runtime Configuration.
Coordinating Preferences.
Understanding Configuration Management
Fundamentals.
Interacting with the Update Manager.
Managing Your Configuration.
Chapter Summary.
Reference.
II. FUNDAMENTALS
OF EXTENDING ECLIPSE. - Extending
Eclipse for Fun and Profit.
Excited About Extending Eclipse? You Should Be!
An Easy and Practical Example.
A Brief Tour of "Hello, World".
Asking the Right Question Is More Important
Than Knowing the Answer.
Where to Go from Here?
- Overview of
the Eclipse Architecture.
That Was Then, This Is Now.
Architectural Top Priorities: Extensibility and
Integration.
Eclipse the IDE Platform and Rich Client
Application.
The Eclipse Platform Runtime.
User Interface Frameworks.
Workbench Frameworks.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Getting
Started: Plug-in Development.
Getting Started with Plug-ins.
Getting Started with Extensions and Extension
Points.
Basic Steps of Implementing a Plug-in.
Using the Plug-in Development Environment.
Exercise Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Creating
Applications Using the Rich Client Platform.
Reasons Applications Are Being Built on the
RCP.
Eclipse Architecture, Revisited.
Opportunities for Reuse of Eclipse.
Implementing Your Own Workbench.
Exercise Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Creating
Extension Points: How Others Can Extend Your Plug-ins.
Relationship Between Extension Points and
Extensions.
Viewing the Official List of Enabled Plug-ins,
Extensions, and Extension Points.
How to Define Extension Points.
Handling Dynamic Plug-ins.
How to Enable the Schema-Based New Extension
Wizard.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Advanced
Plug-in Development.
Migrating Your Plug-ins from Eclipse 2.1.
Plug-in Class Loader.
Runtime Discovery and Delayed Loading.
Forcing Early Plug-in Activation.
Plug-in Granularity.
Plug-in Fragments.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Defining
Features and Products.
Features.
Products.
Exercise Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References.
III. EXTENDING
THE ECLIPSE WORKBENCH. - The Standard
Widget Toolkit: A Lean, Mean Widget Machine.
The Basic Structure of an SWT Application.
Common SWT Widgets.
Responding to Events.
How to Arrange SWT Widgets Using Layout
Managers.
Error Handling.
Widgets Have Special Disposal Requirements.
Using Threads to Separate UI and Non-UI
Activities.
An Overview of SWT Packages.
SWT Support for Swing.
Eclipse Forms.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References.
- JFace
Viewers.
Viewer Basics.
Viewer Framework.
Creating the Basic Content Viewer Arrangement.
Controlling the Content Displayed in a
Structured Viewer.
Interacting with Viewer Objects.
Using Alternative Viewer Types.
Advanced Workbench Integration Options.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References.
- Dialogs and
Wizards.
Dialogs-The User Interface Beyond Workbench
Parts.
Contributing to the Preferences Dialog.
Contributing to the Properties Dialog.
Contributing Wizards.
Directly Opening a Wizard Dialog for Your
Wizard.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Dialog
Settings, Preferences, and User Settings.
Overview of the Options.
Storing Values in Dialog Settings.
Storing Preference Values for a Plug-in.
Scoped Value Management with User Settings.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References.
- Views.
Views: The General-Purpose Workbench Part.
View Implementation.
Supporting Action Contributions.
Interacting with Other Workbench Components.
Examples Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References.
- Editors.
Editor Behavior and Architecture.
Basic Implementation Steps.
Beyond the Basic Implementation Steps.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References.
- Perspectives.
Creating a Perspective.
Using the perspectiveExtensions Extension
Point.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
Reference. - Action
Contributions: The Integration Fast Track.
Action Contribution Extension Points.
The Fundamentals of Action Contributions.
Contributing to the Workbench Menu Bar and
Toolbar.
Contributing to the View's Menu and Toolbar.
Contributing to an Editor's Menu and Toolbar.
Contributing Context Menus to Views and
Editors.
Assigning Accelerator Keys to Your Actions.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References.
- Providing
Help.
Integrating Your Online Documentation.
Creating Context-Sensitive Help.
Running the Standalone Help Infocenter.
Customizing Your Help System.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References.
IV. EXTENDING
THE ECLIPSE IDE. - Workspace
Resource Programming.
Resource Concepts.
Workspace API.
Resource Properties.
Processing Workspace Resource Change Events.
Resource Modification Event Management.
Using Workspace Save Events to Save Critical
Data.
Examples Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References.
- Managing
Resources with Natures and Builders.
Customizing Project Processing.
Defining and Implementing a Nature.
Defining and Implementing an Incremental
Project Builder.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Resource
Tagging Using Markers.
Using Markers.
Adding New Marker Types.
Extending Markers with Generators for
Resolution and Help Support.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Building a
Custom Text Editor with JFace Text.
Standard Text Editor Functions.
Editor Configuration: Customization Points.
Under the Covers of the Text Editor.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References.
- Extending
the Java Development Tools.
What Is the JDT and What Does It Do?
Java Model.
Accessing Reusable JDT Functionality.
Compiling Java Source Code.
Analyzing Java Source Code.
Manipulating Java Source Code.
Where the JDT Extends Eclipse.
Extending the JDT User Interface.
Examples Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References.
V. EXTENSIBILITY
SPECIAL TOPICS. - Serviceability.
Plug-in Diagnostics: System and Configuration
Information.
Eclipse Status Objects: A Status Collector.
Exception Handling: Error Detection.
Error Dialogs: Providing Detailed Status in
Error Messages.
Runtime Tracing: A Runtime Diagnostic Tool.
Using Tracing in a Production Environment.
Diagnostics: A Comprehensive Error Log.
Error Logging: Writing to the Workbench Error
Log.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
Reference.
- Implementing
Responsiveness and Concurrency Using Jobs.
Concurrency Framework.
Using Jobs.
User Interaction Options.
Job Contention Management Options.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Using
Capabilities to Manage Too Much of a Good Thing.
Introducing Capabilities.
The Capabilities Extension Point.
Defining Primary Wizards.
The Activities API.
Defining Your Own Triggers.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Internationalization and Accessibility.
What Does Internationalization Affect in Your
Plug-in?
Internationalization Steps.
Accessibility.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Performance
Tuning.
Why Eclipse Should Start Quickly.
Diagnosing Startup Problems Using the Runtime
Spy.
Case Study: Improving IBM WebSphere Studio's
Startup.
Avoiding Performance Regressions Using the
Performance Monitor.
Common Solutions to Eclipse-Specific
Performance Problems.
Chapter Summary.
References. - Swing
Interoperability.
Embedding AWT and Swing in Views and Editors.
Launch-and-Edit Integration.
ABCEditor Example-In-Process Invocation.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
References.
- OLE and
ActiveX Interoperability.
COM Support in Eclipse.
COM Container Support.
OLE Automation-Accessing Extended Behavior.
Example Summary.
Chapter Summary.
Reference.
VI. EXERCISES.
Exercise 1:
Using Eclipse.
Section 1: Your First Eclipse Project.
Section 2: Editors and Views.
Section 3: Working with Resources.
Section 4: Perspectives.
Section 5: Using Multiple Eclipse Windows and
Workspaces.
Section 6: Getting Assistance.
Exercise Activity Review.
References.
Exercise 2:
Using Java Development Tools.
Section 1: Hello World.
Section 2: Quick Fix.
Section 3: Code Generation.
Section 4: Refactoring.
Exercise Activity Review.
References.
Exercise 3:
Running and Debugging Java.
Section 1: Launch Configurations.
Section 2: Debugging.
Section 3: Debugging II.
Section 4: Debugging Threads.
Section 5: Remote Debugging.
Exercise Activity Review.
References.
Exercise 4:
Developing a Simple Web Commerce Application with Eclipse.
Exercise Setup.
Section 1: Setting up the Runtime Environment.
Section 2: Creating a Project for the Example.
Section 3: Debugging the Example.
Section 4: Deploying the Example.
Exercise Activity Review.
References.
Exercise 5:
Working as a Team with CVS.
Exercise Setup.
Section 1: Getting Started.
Section 2: Updating, Committing, and Resolving
Conflicts.
Section 3: Branching and Merging.
Exercise Activity Review.
Reference.
Exercise 6:
Developing Your First Plug-in.
Exercise Setup 954Section 1: "Hello, World" in
Five Minutes or Less.
Section 2: "Hello, World" with Detailed
Step-by-Step Instructions.
Section 3: Testing with the Runtime Workbench.
Section 4: Debugging with the Runtime
Workbench.
Section 5: Defining a Feature to Support the
Plug-in.
Section 6: Deploying a Feature and Its
Associated Plug-ins.
Section 7: Exploring (and Sometimes Correcting)
the Eclipse Platform Code.
Section 8: Correcting Common Problems.
Exercise Activity Review.
Exercise 7:
Developing Your First Rich Client Application.
Exercise Setup.
Getting Started.
Section 1: Creating an Application Extension.
Section 2: Creating a Perspective Extension.
Section 3: Creating a Workbench Advisor.
Section 4: Implementing the Application's Main
Program.
Section 5: Running and Testing Your RCP
Application.
Section 6: Configuring Workbench Window User
Interface Elements.
Section 7: Adding Menu and Toolbar Actions.
Section 8: Deploying Your Application.
Section 9: Adding "Optional" Components.
Exercise Activity Review.
Exercise 8:
Developing a Rich Client Application with Dynamically Added Plug-ins.
Exercise Setup.
Section 1: Create Your RCP Application Launch
Configuration.
Section 2: Implement Your Plug-in Life Cycle
start() Method.
Section 3: Implement Your Configurator.
Section 4: Develop a Simple Plug-in Discovery
Mechanism.
Section 5: Installing the Bonus Pack
Dynamically.
Exercise Activity Review.
Exercise 9:
Deploying Your Product Using Features.
Exercise Setup.
Section 1: Tasks of a Feature Developer.
Section 2: Tasks of an Eclipse User.
Section 3: Tasks of a Product Developer.
Section 4: Tasks for a Product Service
Team-Implementing an Update Site.
Section 5: Tasks of an Eclipse User-Redux.
Exercise Activity Review.
Index.