Basically I have an image I'm trying to use as a splash screen. I set up the splash screen and even told it the location(":/Nuclear_Vortex_100_About.jpg") but when I run the program, all I see is a general window background "window"(no close box or any of the decoration, just a widget for lack of a better word) and no image on it.
I added the file (along with a bunch of other images I want to later load and use in the app) and they show up in the "Other Files" folder - ok so I figured since they're in the project, that they would be seen as resources if not source or headers. Do I need to add a special section to the PRO file or something in order to use the file? I'm about to just hard code an absolute path just to get it to work but I want a system independent way to get this done. I'm going to be paid for this project and I don't have much experience with the resource system in QT but it wasn't hard in Visual Studio and other C++ environments. As I see the splash screen show up, I know that part is working. The only thing I don't know for sure is that the file is not being found - that is I have not verified by using QFile and checking if it exists - I'll be doing that after I post this as it'll take some time to get a response or 2.
I have been searching for over a day and a half all over google and haven't found anything telling me what I'm doing wrong.
Thank you!
create resource file (.qrc) and add picture in it. It'll appear in resources section of your project. Then you can use it freely in your program.
Referred below link
https://docs.corda.net/releases/release-M10.1/tutorial-cordapp.html
Click open, then navigate to the folder where you cloned the cordapp-tutorial and click OK.
Next, IntelliJ will show a bunch of pop-up windows. One of which requires our attention:
Click the ‘import gradle project’ link. A dialogue will pop-up. Press OK. Gradle will now obtain all the project dependencies and perform some indexing. It usually takes a minute or so. If you miss the ‘import gradle project’ dialogue, simply close and re-open IntelliJ again to see it again.
Question: I can't find the link. And there were no pop up windows. I followed the instructions. Don't know why I am stuck
First of all, you should refer to M13 or M14 and check out on it, second "Question: I can't find the link." it's not a question....please provide a more detailed one
The problem occurred after I had added Groovy Unit Testing .jar to my project (it is sole activity I suppose which could 'damage' my Intellij but it is quite likely that the reason is something else because the problem is global - it appears in all projects).
For example I get message like this:
but after I press Alt+Enter nothing happen.
If I append another keyboard shortcut for "show intention actions" it doesn't work either. However if I append Alt+Enter with another action then that another action works properly using this shortcut.
It is also interesting that shortcut Alt+Enter is reserved not only for action "show intention actions", but if I remove another associations it still doesn't work.
Every intentions in Intellij are enabled and power save mode is disabled.
I have read
IntelliJ, Alt+Enter doesnt work
Auto errors detection in IntelliJ IDEA
but it doesn't solve my problem.
Your IntelliJ IDEA installation seems to be corrupted, some jars are missing.
Caused by: java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: groovy.lang.Closure PluginClassLoader[org.intellij.groovy, 9.0]
The solution would be reinstall the same version you have from this link or install the current version.
The solution was: missing groovy-all-2.4.6.jar file in my /home/user/idea-IU-162.2228.15/lib folder.
How have I removed it?
According to jetbrains page I chose Groovy JUnit test library and press fix. After few minutes I decided not to use Groovy JUnit so I deleted this library from my project, but in practice I removed .jar from my folder and that was the reason why alt+enter didn't work. After the .jar is restored everything is as normal.
Thank you CrazyCoder and liro Alhonen
You don't have the libraries stated that you are using. You can do this manually if it does not fill them automatically. It should if you select from the list and hit enter.
In my case i just try to use left alt:
LEFT Alt + Enter
LEFT Alt+Enter
Looks like some languages override Right Alt behavior, at least in
case of Lithuanian Left Alt is working fine with Lithuanian enabled,
Right does not, when switch to English, everything is fine again. Was
pulling hair to figure out why out of nowhere it stops working, thanks
I hava same problem that can not auto import package by ALT+ENTER in MacOS. solved by next step:
Preferences --> Editor --> Intentions
search Refactorings
enable introduce local variable
I have two cloned repositories of two very similar open-source projects, which I have been working on in different instances in Sublime Text 2 to arrive at my desired result. Code from both of these projects was used. I have been using Git as version control for my project, but have not included the original projects. Thus, I would like to be able to quickly compare the contents of two files of the original project and compare the differences between them and my project.
I was hoping that Sublime Text 2 would have a "Compare File" feature, but I can't seem to find anything related to it in the settings or online. A third-party ST2 package to accomplish this task would also work well. Is such a task possible to do within the ST2 text editor?
You can actually compare files natively right in Sublime Text.
Navigate to the folder containing them through Open Folder... or
in a project
Select the two files (ie, by holding Ctrl on
Windows or ⌘ on macOS) you want to compare in the sidebar
Right click and select the Diff files... option.
Compare Side-By-Side looks like the most convenient to me though it's not the most popular:
UPD: I need to add that this plugin can freeze ST while comparing big files. It is certainly not the best decision if you are going to compare large texts.
There are a number of diff plugins available via Package Control. I've used Sublimerge Pro, which worked well enough, but it's a commercial product (with an unlimited trial period) and closed-source, so you can't tweak it if you want to change something, or just look at its internals. FileDiffs is quite popular, judging by the number of installs, so you might want to try that one out.
UPDATE (Given the upvotes, I feel there is a need for a complete step-by-step explanation...)
In the Menu bar click on File->Open Folder...
Select a folder (the actual folder does not really matter, this step is just to make the FOLDERS sidebar available)
If there is no Side Bar shown yet, make it appear via View -> Side Bar -> Show Side Bar
Use this FOLDERS-titled Side Bar to navigate to the first file you want to compare.
Select it (click on it), hold down ctrl and select the second file.
Having two files selected, right click on one of the two and select Diff Files...
There should be a new Tab now showing the comparison.
Original short answer:
Note that:
The "Diff files" only appears with the "folders" sidebar (to open a folder: File->Open Folder) , not with "open files" sidebar.
UPDATE JAN 2018 - especially for Sublime/Mac
(This is very similar to Marty F's reply, but addresses some issues from previous responses, combines several different suggestions and discusses the critical distinction that gave me problems at first.)
I'm using Sublime Text 3 (build 3143) on Mac and have been trying for about 30 minutes to find this File Compare feature. I had used it before on Sublime/Mac without any problems, but this time, it was trickier. But, I finally figured it out.
The file format does not need to be UTF-8. I have successfully compared files that are UTF-8, ISO-8559-1, and Windows-1252.
There is no File > Open Folders on Sublime/Mac. Many instructions above start with "Select File > Open Folders," but that doesn't exist on Sublime/Mac.
File compare works on a Project basis. If you want to compare two files, they must be saved to disk and part of the current project.
Ways to open a project
If Sublime/Mac is not running or if it's running but no windows are open, drag a folder onto the Sublime app.
If Sublime/Mac is running, select "File > Open", navigate to the desired folder, don't select a file or folder and click "Open".
Add a folder to a project. If the files you want to compare are not part of the same hierarchy, first open the folder containing one of the files. Then, select "Project > Add Folder to Project", navigate to the folder you want and click "Open". You will now see two root-level folders in your sidebar.
The Sidebar must be visible. You can either "View > Side Bar > Show Side Bar" or use the shortcut, Command-K, Command-B.
Files must be closed (ie, saved) to compare. Single-clicking a file in the Side Bar does not open the file, but it does display it. You can tell if a file is open if it's listed in the "Open Files" section at the top of the Side Bar. Double-clicking a file or making a modification to a file will automatically change a file's status to "Open". In this case, be sure to close it before trying to compare.
Select files from the folder hierarchy. Standard Mac shorcut here, (single) click the first file, then Command-click the second file. When you select the first file, you'll see its contents, but it's not open. Then, when you Command-click the second file, you'll see its contents, but again, neither are open. You'll notice only one tab in the editing panel.
Control-click is not the same as right-click. This was the one that got me. I use my trackpad and often resort to Control-click as a right-click or secondary-click. This does not work for me. However, since I configured my trackpad in System Preferences to use the bottom-right corner of my trackpad as a right-click, that worked, displaying the contextual menu, with "Delete", "Reveal in Finder", and.... "Diff Files..."
Voilà!
UPDATE OCTOBER 2017
I never knew this feature existed in Sublime Text, but the interface appears to have changed slightly from the previous answer - at least on OS X. Here are the detailed steps I followed:
In the Menu Bar click File -> Open...
Navigate to the FOLDER that contains the files to be compared and with the FOLDER selected, click the Open button, this makes the FOLDERS sidebar appear
In the FOLDERS sidebar, click on the first file to be compared
Hold the Ctrl on Windows or ⌘ on OS X, and click the second file
With both files selected, right click on one and select Diff Files...
This opens a new tab showing the comparison. The first file in red, the second in green.
View - Layout and View - Groups will do in latest Sublime 3
eg:
Shift+Alt+2 --> creates 2 columns
Ctrl+2 --> move selected file to column 2
This is for side by side comparison.
For actual diff, there is the diff function other already mentioned.
Unfortunately, I can't find a way to make columns scroll at the same time, which would be a nice feature.
The Diff Option only appears if the files are in a folder that is part of a Project.
Than you can actually compare files natively right in Sublime Text.
Navigate to the folder containing them through Open Folder... or in a project
Select the two files (ie, by holding Ctrl on Windows or ⌘ on macOS) you want to compare in the sidebar
Right click and select the Diff files... option.
No one is talking about Linux but all above answers will work. Just use Ctrl to select more than one file. If you are looking to compare side by side, Meld is lovely.
There's a BeyondCompare plugin as well. It opens the 2 files in a BeyondCompare window. Pretty convenient to open files from the sublime window.
You will need BC3 installation present in the system.
After installing the plugin, you will have to provide the path to the installation.
Example:
{
//Define a custom path to beyond compare
"beyond_compare_path": "G:/Softwares/Beyond Compare 3/BCompare.exe"
}
Before anything, I will first say that I've been looking everywhere for a solution to this problem for an hour now. There are many identical problems out there but none of the solutions help me.
I'm trying to debug a small project. When I started working on the project, I could place break points wherever I wanted and I would hit them. But for some reason, now when I place breakpoints outside of the main program (in a class definition, for example), the breakpoints hollow out while the code is running and I get a message saying the source code is different from the original version.
This led me to believe it was running a previous build, so I made an obvious change by having the code output some random letters "dajfhdjhfds";
I hit F7 as usual. Got a message saying Build: 1 succeeded. Hit F5, the program runs but does not display the random letters.
I clean my solution, then build and the changes show. I 'rebuild' the solution, and the changes show. The breakpoints also work.
But then if I make further changes, the breakpoints stop working and the changes don't appear in the program. Visual Studio is always running old code. I don't want to have to clean my solution every time I want to debug new code.
I've reset my settings, I checked off "build" in the configuration manager, I even started a whole new project and copied my code into new files. Same issue.
The problem resided in the fact that I copied the code from the original project into a brand new project saved elsewhere. When I tried to build the project in the new location it would always build it in the old location (Strange since I copied code directly into brand new files).
When I tried to run the files it would look for the built code in the new location. Therefore it would always get out of date code.
Problem can be fixed by putting the new code back in the old location!
Thanks everyone
I had this problem occur also, using WinForms. I was adding message boxes to test code and nothing was happening, only the pre-existing message boxes worked. I'm not sure 'exactly' how I fixed it, but after clicking "Build Solution", "Rebuild Solution", "Clean Solution" and "Build (program name)" all under the 'Build' menu the problem went away. Unlike the previous problems I had not copied+pasted any code between solutions.
I've started running into an identical problem and I think it all started when I re-created the project under a new name.
That is, I had to copy everything.
Problem is I don't know what DIDN'T get fully copied and is now responsible for requiring a rebuild to get my code changes. Checked the solution and project files in a text editor and no signs of the old folder structure.