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Eclipse Plug-in Development Beginner's Guide - Second Edition

You're reading from  Eclipse Plug-in Development Beginner's Guide - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Aug 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783980697
Pages 458 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Alex Blewitt Alex Blewitt
Profile icon Alex Blewitt

Table of Contents (24) Chapters

Eclipse Plug-in Development Beginner's Guide Second Edition
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Creating Your First Plug-in 2. Creating Views with SWT 3. Creating JFace Viewers 4. Interacting with the User 5. Working with Preferences 6. Working with Resources 7. Creating Eclipse 4 Applications 8. Migrating to Eclipse 4.x 9. Styling Eclipse 4 Applications 10. Creating Features, Update Sites, Applications, and Products 11. Automated Testing of Plug-ins 12. Automated Builds with Tycho 13. Contributing to Eclipse Using OSGi Services to Dynamically Wire Applications Pop Quiz Answers Index

Open source contributions


Eclipse is an open source code base, and has been written by thousands of individuals across the years. The Eclipse Foundation are the stewards of the code, but the foundation staff themselves are few in number and generally do not write the code for Eclipse itself; rather, they look after the ancillary services (bug tracker, git and Gerrit source code repositories, news groups, wiki, and website) and the EclipseCon and DevoxxUS conferences around the world (http://eclipsecon.org, http://devoxx.us). There are commercial companies who build their products on Eclipse and contribute to the underlying platform, but there are many open-source volunteers who contribute their time and effort to improve Eclipse. This chapter will show you how you can make a contribution to Eclipse by checking out a repository, raising a bug, and filing a patch.

Importing the source

Eclipse ships with source code for the provided plug-ins with the Eclipse SDK and the Eclipse IDE for Committers...

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