Centos7 shows > instead of < - centos7

I'm experiencing a very odd problem.
I've installed CentOS7 and I'm configuring php, so I wanted to create a phpinfo file.
I'm typing < to open the tag, however the screen shows >.
Is anybody familiar with this problem and knows how to solve it?

Related

How to disable the GUI in order to run the C++ program via SSH?

I'm trying to run this program remotely via SSH, but since it has a GUI, I get the error: "Could not connect to any X display."
I don't need the GUI, since I made some adaptions and want to experiment with it. I'm very new to programming, especially in C++.
So far, I tried to solve the problem, by removing/commenting the lines related to the uvcvideoproducer in the main.cpp and compiling it again, but it's still looking for a display and doesn't start via SSH.
When I entered the command "export DISPLAY=:0" in the command line first, then trying to run the programm, I get the output: "No protocol specified
qt.qpa.screen: QXcbConnection: Could not connect to display :0
Could not connect to any X display."
I really don't know where to continue from here in order to solve the issue I'm having.
Thanks a lot, in advance for any help! It's very appreciated!
Thanks for your responses!
The thing about ssh -X is, my colleague said, it's sometimes not even working between different distributions, and I'm even using Windows to connect to Ubuntu Server on a Raspberry Pi. So sorry for not adding this important information into my original post.
I actually solved my problem by using the Xvfb library in order to simulate a display.
The only things I had to do are first installing it:
sudo apt-get install xvfb
And then run the program via the xvfb command:
xvfb-run -a --server-args='-screen 0, 160x120x16' ./GetThermal
I could also use a simulated display in the size of 1024x768x16 and probably many more formats, I just didn't notice any performance difference, when I was running it.

Eclipse shortcuts do not work ubuntu

I have installed Eclipse Neon with C++ features on Ubuntu 16.04.
My problem is that some more unusual shortcuts do not work such as "copy lines" (ctrl+alt+down), or "move lines up" (alt+up), or autocomplete (ctrl+space) for example.
The others more usual like "ctrl+c" or "ctrl+f" or "ctrl+z" do work.
I have tried to restart eclipse, and even the computer. I have restored the defaults key bindings but they do not work anymore. I think they worked just few times at the beginning after installing eclipse.
I don't want to uninstall and then reinstall eclipse because it is not a good solution if I have to do that every time, it will be just bothering at will. While searching for solutions on Google, it seems it is a quite recurrent issue for eclipse, but there is never real answers for them.
Thank you in advance
Go to Window > Preferences > General > Keys and change commands involving arrow keys or other keys that don't work such as:
ctrl+Alt+upArrow
To something involving a key that registers when set in binding, such as:
ctrl+Alt+d
Eclipse was having trouble with arrow keys and function keys on my system and this solved it. Hopefully helps someone who ends up on this page.
Running Arch linux version = Linux 4.15.7-1-ARCH

VSCode "go to definition" not working

I installed Visual Studio Code 1.1 with the C/C++ extension,
opened my C++ project and tried to use "Go to definition" in vain.
The "Go to definition" is not working at all.
Example, go to definition of a class member:
int i = m_myVar;
(I opened a simpler project with one file and it was working for this one)
In the end, what I want is good indexation of my big project, is there a way to install Intellisense?
I had a the same issue: F12 and Ctrl + Click and Right Click "Go To Definition" wasn't working.
The fix for me was:
Go to Extensions
Click "Disable All Installed Extensions"
Close and Reopen VS Code
Back to Extensions and "Enable All Extensions"
Essentially enable/disable all extensions fixed the issue.
I recently came across this same issue and after trying all of the suggested solutions I could find with no success, I found this article:
https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/setup/linux#_visual-studio-code-is-unable-to-watch-for-file-changes-in-this-large-workspace-error-enospc
Basically my project grew too large and VS code was no longer able to track all files, which messed up the "go to definition" functionality.
After following the steps on the link to increase the maximum number of files to be tracked, the issue was resolved.
The correction is pretty simple (tested on Ubuntu 18.04):
Add this line:
fs.inotify.max_user_watches=524288
to the end of the file /etc/sysctl.conf
After saving, run the following command:
sudo sysctl -p
Hopefully this will be useful to someone else, this has been bothering me for the last few days.
I had a similar problem except with Python and google searches for solutions kept bringing me back to this post so I figured I'd post my solution here in the hopes that it might help other people.
I was working on a remote cluster through VScode Remote and was getting similar errors to the original question(all 'go to ___' functionality was unavailable and was even getting a 'too large to track' error) and I thought I had to increase the number of watches, which didn't end up helping.
All I needed to do was install a python interpreter on the remote VScode server. This fixed my problem.
I believe vscode 1.1 (well, 1.1.1 actually) + the C++ extension (cpptools) is as much Intellisense as we can get for now.
You should load your big project with the "open folder" function to make vscode know about the other files.
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/vcblog/2016/03/31/cc-extension-for-visual-studio-code/ warns about letting the indexing finish first (red icon in lower right corner during indexing) and mentions the current limitations on the source code parsing.
It wasn't working on my laptop as well after installing a few VSCode extensions. I decided to close and re-open VSCode with administrator permission and suddenly it sorted out.
I have been trying to fix this for a long time. In the end, what worked for me was simply reinstalling VSCode, then installing the latest C/C++ extension (v0.18.1). Then, in your .vscode/c_cpp_properties.json file, under includePath, add your include folder which has all your header files.
I tried the methods mentioned in this thread none of them seemed to work for me. A simple solution that worked for me is that I closed the current workspace and created a new workspace, added the folders which I required(same as the old workspace), and saved the new workspace. Waited for a couple of minutes to index and IntelliSense is able to find definitions now.
I am using VSCode 1.52.1 on Ubuntu 20.04.
In my case, for whatever reason,c_cpp_properties.json has become set to Disabled in ~/.config/Code/User/settings.json.
Manually changing it to Enabled solved the problem.
Fixed mine by UNCHECKING C_Cpp > Default > Limit Symbols To Included Headers
Your mileage may vary. Good luck!
Have you saved your workspace? Or did you just open a folder with File->Open Folder? This question already has many answers, but none of them address this case, which was my issue.
The question is not specific enough for me to know if you are having the exact same symptoms as my case.
If:
You have not saved your workspace. vscode doesn't say "(workspace)" at the top of the window.
None of the goto functions are working, but instead report: "No ___ found for ____"
The tag parser database icon in the bottom right is always there but only reports "Parsing open files", rather than telling you how many files have been parsed.
Then:
Try saving your workspace.
If you have multiple versions of a language on your PC, specify the exact language you are using in the VScode(in my case, I am using Python, so I must specify the version to the python Interpreter in VS Code)
If you could not do it whatsoever, then uninstall all the other versions that you don't use and then if you go to VS Code, it will ask the version to be used, and you would have only one version, so when you select the version, the "Go To Definition" will be activated.
I was having a similar issue with java on Ubuntu 20.04 using OpenJDK version 11 (openjdk-11-jdk in apt). At first I didn't have the JRE installed, so I installed it and it still didn't work.
Afterwards, I went to the CTRL + SHIFT + P menu and then to Java: Configure Java Runtime, there I saw in the Java Tooling Runtime tab that /usr/lib/jvm/java-11-openjdk-amd64 was selected, changed it to /usr/lib/jvm/java-1.11.0-openjdk-amd64 just to see if it would work, and after a restart it did. I'm not sure why this is, but I hope it may help somone else.
For python ensure your code analysis settings are correct. In my case the languageServer was accidentally set to 'None'. Reverting it to 'default' or 'pylance' did the trick.
Just to inform if none of above works then
In my case i was using Kite extension in my VS code, I just disabled it and it worked. I think kite extension is blocking this feature.
OS: Linux Ubuntu 22.04
if you encountered with following error:
"The .NET Core SDK cannot be located. .NET Core debugging will not be enabled. Make sure the .NET Core SDK is installed and is on the path."
Normally Vscode remains unable to locate .Net sdk. need to set path manually.
sudo ln -s /snap/dotnet-sdk/current/dotnet /usr/local/bin/dotnet
restart omnisharp & restart vscode
No need to do anything. Just close and re-open. It will work.
I also faced similar problem. In my mac os cmnd + 'click' is used to 'go to definition' then it suddenly stoped working. If that is the case then please follow these steps:
restart vs code
restart pc
uninstall all extensions and reinstall again followed by a pc restart.
I had a similar issue with the extension C/C++ installed. I solved it by downloading an older version of the extension and upgrading to the last version. Somehow it solved the problem...

Eclipse with CDT not compiling at all

I have been trying out using Eclipse CDT for a course I am taking. Previously I have been using Visual Studio Express but since that requires me to be online and I have to use the IDE+compiler offline, I switched to Eclipse + Cygwin GCC.
Now everything was working prefectly, until I got an error about file paths in my make file. After reading some of the posts online, the issue seemed to be that Cygwin's make does not resolve absolute Windows file paths because of the ':' symbol and confuses it with a new target definition. The proposed fix was to download a fixed make file. I diligently did so and the programs would compile fine.
But after I went into the first debug session, everything froze. I aborted eclipse and tried a clean build but now the compilation wont happen AT ALL, which is very weird for me.
I can't find a post for a similar problem so I am really stuck now. I was currently working the assumption that my CDT may be corrupt or something so I downloaded Eclipse Luna just today and tried building using that, but no joy. Even a fresh project in a new workspace wont compile.
Appreciate the help in advance.
Did you try redownloading Eclipse? Sometimes Eclipse gets a fatal error glitch that makes it unable to compile anything. I've had this problem before, the only way i was able to fix it was to uninstall and re download the latest version. If this doesnt work, try switching to Bloodshed Dev C++ or codeblocks.
So it seems like an issue with the new make (v3.80). upgating it to v4.08 fixed the issue of not building.
Version 4.08 however does not fix the Windows file paths not being recognized properly and treated as a target definition. I am still getting the multiple target patterns. stop error.
EDIT: Found this on Stack overflow to solve the issue... should have searched better previously.
Very simple application fails with "multiple target patterns" from Eclipse

Netbeans is not highlighting unresolved identifiers

I've been working with Netbeans on Mac OS for the past few months (in C++) but have now moved to Ubuntu 12.04. I'm compiling via command line and just using Netbeans as an editor because I like the code assistance and things like that that it has. Normally it seems people want to disable code assistance and highlighting but in my case, they are not working and I don't know why. All the boxes are checked under the Editor>Highlighting tab. When I deliberately misspell a variable it does not complain. Syntax highlighting works fine. Is there some other thing I need to install?
I apologize is this is a very simple thing but googling and searching docs has not helped since it seems everyone is concerned with the opposite problem.
Does NetBeans use clang for static code analysis? Maybe you need to install it.