I am trying to share a workspace in Eclipse. To test it I copied my current workspace to a different directory. Then when eclipse loads it pops up a dialog box to select a workspace.
When I changed the workspace to the one I copied it did not work. It did not load the workspace I copied and loaded the default screen. Is there anyway to save a workspace to a different location and reload it for later use?
I am using eclipse 3.7.0 on ubuntu 11.10.
I solved this by exporting a project archive. Then importing the project as an archive in a new workspace.
Related
Currently, I am working on cloning the Cilantro github repository. I did using Cmake and also downloaded the required dependencies. The issue is I cannot run any files inside the project as well as newly created .cpp files for testing.
When I build the project it does builds successfully. but Whenever, I try to run by clicking in Local windows debugger I keep getting error unable to start program access denied.
snapshot of my current error
Things, I have done but not helped
uninstall MC*** antivirus
disabled the Real-time protection in systems virus security
rebuild the project and it build successfully
snapshot successfull Rebuild
also tried making cilantro as my set as project but than I am getting following error.
cilantro, set as project
I need help to run the project and remove the following error. Also,is there an easier way to clone and run the project in visual studios without using CMAKE GUI?
IDE: Visual Studios; Trying to run C++ program
Used CMAKE gui to build this project Cilantro
Github which I am trying to run is : https://github.com/kzampog/cilantro
make you project as set as startup project
Solution Explorer > cilantro (Right click) > set as startup project
official doc
I have a windows service project that I inherited and need to migrate it to a new server. I have made changes to some code, and so I created a new setup project in VS 2017. I added the .exe of the service to the set up package, and rebuilt both the service and the setup projects. When I run the .msi it seems to complete installation but when I look in the Windows Services list it's not there. What am I missing?
Any help is greatly appreciated. Thanks!
The installer probably didn't run the installutil.exe program.
You can do this manually by dropping to a command prompt then navigating to the location that the installer put the .exe file. From there run this:
installutil.exe myservice.exe
where myservice is the exe file you generated.
For more information:
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/framework/tools/installutil-exe-installer-tool
Also, you might need to add the installutil.exe path. It's part of the .net framework and will be found in that install directory.
When I create a project in JetBrains WebStorm, a folder called .idea gets created. Is it okay if I delete it? Will it affect my project?
When you use the IntelliJ IDE, all the project-specific settings for the project are stored under the .idea folder.
Project settings are stored with each specific project as a set of xml
files under the .idea folder. If you specify the default project
settings, these settings will be automatically used for each newly
created project.
Check this documentation for the IDE settings and here is their recommendation on Source Control and an example .gitignore file.
Note: If you are using git or some version control system, you might want to set this folder "ignore".
Example - for git, add this directory to .gitignore. This way, the application is not IDE-specific.
There is no problem in deleting this. It's not only the WebStorm IDE creating this file, but also PhpStorm and all other of JetBrains' IDEs.
It is safe to delete it but if your project is from GitLab or GitHub then you will see a warning.
As of year 2020, JetBrains suggests to commit the .idea folder.
The JetBrains IDEs (webstorm, intellij, android studio, pycharm, clion, etc.) automatically add that folder to your git repository (if there's one).
Inside the folder .idea, has been already created a .gitignore, updated by the IDE itself to avoid to commit user related settings that may contains privacy/password data.
It is safe (and usually useful) to commit the .idea folder.
It contains your local IntelliJ IDE configs. I recommend adding this folder to your .gitignore file:
# intellij configs
.idea/
The reason my device was not being recognized was because my emulator was frozen.
What helped me was to wipe my emulator's data.
Android Emulator freezes
Checkout #gimme-the-411 's comment on this thread.
I have a WCF DataService build in VS 2010, targetting .Net 4.0. This all works fine. I've created a deployment package and have the application deployed to a web server using MSDeploy and a zip file. When I set up an automated build on a TFS Build Agent the contents of the deployment package changed. I no longer get the strong named assemblies in my deployment package. These excluded assemblies are projects within the solution and are built on the Build Server.
I don't see a lot of configuration options for the deployment package, but I would like to know why the build server creates a different package than my workstation, using the same settings.
I am using "Only files needed to run this application", I have ticked "Exclude generated debug symbols" and "Exclude files from App_Data folder". I _do_not_ include database packages. I do create a zip file (which is missing the strong named assemblies)
Thanks for any information you may have explaining why this occurs. Then maybe I can solve the problem.
Beezler
On the build server I've ungaced the assemblies I was concerned about and that got my deployment package to the state I want it. So it appears the deployment package does not include the GACed assemblies, which is a good thing. I would still like to know how to override this behavior on certain referenced assemblies.
Thanks,
If you want to include a DLL files for a GAC assembly do the following:
In your project, expand the "References" folder
right-click on the reference you want to include the DLL and click "properties" to bring up the properties pane
set "Copy Local" to "True"
That's it! When publishing your project, it will include the DLL in the bin folder for that reference!
I have a C++ console application that I want to deploy using a vs2008 setup project. When I create the setup project and add the output from my console app, the setup project detects that it needs MSVCP90.dll and MSVCR90.dll. When I build the project, those two dlls are included in the .msi file as expected.
When I download and launch the installer, everything goes as expected and the console app and the dlls are unpacked into the proper directory on the local machine.
When I try and run the app, I get the following error:
Error 1721. There is a problem with
this Windows Installer package. A
program required for this install to
complete could not be run. Contact
your support personnel or package
vendor.
I've tried compiling the app with /MT and /MD neither one works.
When I run a dependency walker against the app, it reports that it needs MSVCP90.dll and MSVCR90.dll as expected.
Finally, if I set the installer to require the Visual C++ runtime libraries, it downloads them and everything works fine.
Obviously, I would like to avoid downloading the CRT libraries.
Thanks for any help,
Jon
Check out this example on how to add the appropriate merge modules and deploy them to your target machine along with your setup.