eclipse.jdt.ls
goimports
eclipse.jdt.ls | goimports | |
---|---|---|
30 | 46 | |
1,649 | 7,229 | |
1.5% | 0.6% | |
9.3 | 9.8 | |
7 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Java | Go | |
Eclipse Public License 2.0 | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
eclipse.jdt.ls
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2.5 Million Java Developers on Visual Studio Code. Microsoft and Red Hat shares Joint Roadmap for Next 6 Months Together
Thanks Eclipse : https://github.com/eclipse-jdtls/eclipse.jdt.ls
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How to use nvim-jdtls for Java and nvim-lspconfig for everything else?
I installed eclipse jdtls which worked for Java, but I was not able to go to definitions for methods/classes outside of my project (ie, libraries and such, something like in IntelliJ where you can go to the definition or implementation for the library code), so I thought it may be a limitation of nvim-lspconfig
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jdtls spams messages in LazyVim
return { { "neovim/nvim-lspconfig", dependencies = { "mfussenegger/nvim-jdtls", init = function() require("lazyvim.util").on_attach(function(_, buffer) -- stylua: ignore vim.keymap.set( "n", "di", "lua require'jdtls'.organize_imports()", { buffer = buffer, desc = "Organize Imports" } ) vim.keymap.set( "n", "dt", "lua require'jdtls'.test_class()", { buffer = buffer, desc = "Test Class" } ) vim.keymap.set( "n", "dn", "lua require'jdtls'.test_nearest_method()", { buffer = buffer, desc = "Test Nearest Method" } ) vim.keymap.set( "v", "de", "lua require('jdtls').extract_variable(true)", { buffer = buffer, desc = "Extract Variable" } ) vim.keymap.set( "n", "de", "lua require('jdtls').extract_variable()", { buffer = buffer, desc = "Extract Variable" } ) vim.keymap.set( "v", "dm", "lua require('jdtls').extract_method(true)", { buffer = buffer, desc = "Extract Method" } ) vim.keymap.set( "n", "cf", "lua vim.lsp.buf.formatting()", { buffer = buffer, desc = "Format" } ) end) end, }, ---@class PluginLspOpts opts = { ---@type lspconfig.options servers = {}, -- you can do any additional lsp server setup here -- return true if you don't want this server to be setup with lspconfig ---@type table setup = { -- example to setup with typescript.nvim jdtls = function(_, opts) local project_name = vim.fn.fnamemodify(vim.fn.getcwd(), ":p:h:t") -- vim.lsp.set_log_level('DEBUG') local workspace_dir = "/home/jake/.workspace/" .. project_name -- See `:help vim.lsp.start_client` for an overview of the supported `config` options. local config = { -- The command that starts the language server -- See: https://github.com/eclipse/eclipse.jdt.ls#running-from-the-command-line cmd = { "java", -- or '/path/to/java17_or_newer/bin/java' "-javaagent:/home/jake/.local/share/java/lombok.jar", -- '-Xbootclasspath/a:/home/jake/.local/share/java/lombok.jar', "-Declipse.application=org.eclipse.jdt.ls.core.id1", "-Dosgi.bundles.defaultStartLevel=4", "-Declipse.product=org.eclipse.jdt.ls.core.product", "-Dlog.protocol=true", "-Dlog.level=ALL", -- '-noverify', "-Xms1g", "--add-modules=ALL-SYSTEM", "--add-opens", "java.base/java.util=ALL-UNNAMED", "--add-opens", "java.base/java.lang=ALL-UNNAMED", "-jar", vim.fn.glob("/usr/share/java/jdtls/plugins/org.eclipse.equinox.launcher_*.jar"), "-configuration", "/usr/share/java/jdtls/config_linux", "-data", workspace_dir, }, root_dir = require("jdtls.setup").find_root({ ".git", "mvnw", "gradlew" settings = { java = {}, }, } require("jdtls").start_or_attach(config) return true end, -- Specify * to use this function as a fallback for any server -- ["*"] = function(server, opts) end, }, }, }, }
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Minecraft modding without the use of intellij
You can absolutely just use Gradle on the command line, and use a language server to get code intelligence in pretty much any editor you like. IntelliJ is very nice, especially for refactoring, but it doesn't have a giant advantage over any other editor, as long as you're sticking to mostly Java.
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Where does the dislike/hate for Java come from?
Try neovim. Builtin support for language servers which provide the basis for IDE functionality, autocomplete, auto import, code actions, refactoring, etc. I believe VSCode uses jdtls on the backend and you can use the same thing with neovim.
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java 19 in latest eclipse IDE
Is seems like valid manual to start language server here https://github.com/eclipse/eclipse.jdt.ls. Not sure what you mean by "starting it with other editors" though. It should be covered by editor own integration with the given LS.
- Is VIM a trap?
- (Discussion) Which IDE is best for Java
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What do you tells VSCode and Jetbrains naysayers
But all of the above to say that Emacs can have the ability to some of if not more than VSCode. As others have said, the Jetbrains IDEs are a different story. They're built to actually understand the code you're writing. It's quite possible, with features like auto-insert and skeletons, to replicate some of the functionality that, say, IntelliJ does. For example, say you find-file into a new file for some Java project. When you first enter the buffer, you could setup a prompt to create a class, enum, interface etc. and then upon a selection, you have the basic relevant code for whatever the selection was made auto-inserted. Or you could just quit the prompt with C-g. Granted that takes some time to set up as well as recreating other smaller features that IntelliJ has. JDTLS can do some of this, but at the end of the day it's not a replacement for IntelliJ and I don't think JDTLS intends to be such.
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Picnic loves Error Prone: producing high-quality and consistent Java code
Just the other day I tested VS Code Java again and apparently the Red Hat team that did the Java language support has gotten some level of null analysis turned on now. Thus I assume the Eclipse LSP https://github.com/eclipse/eclipse.jdt.ls has that support now.
goimports
- Gopls/v0.15.0
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How to find all methods which return struct "Foo" (vscode or cli)
Just a guess, but it might be somewhere in gopls https://github.com/golang/tools/tree/master/gopls/doc On this page https://langserver.org/ it says it should support "finding references"
- Major rewrite of gopls released (2 weeks ago)
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What LSP are y'all using?
Language server protocol. Here’s a good one: https://github.com/golang/tools/blob/master/gopls/README.md
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Can Someone Explain To Me Like I'm 5
gopls was not able to find modules in your workspace.When outside of GOPATH, gopls needs to know which modules you are working on.You can fix this by opening your workspace to a folder inside a Go module, orby using a go.work file to specify multiple modules.See the documentation for more information on setting up your workspace:https://github.com/golang/tools/blob/master/gopls/doc/workspace.md.
- Latest gopls version still v0.11.0 from December 22?
- GitHub - orijtech/structslop: structslop is a static analyzer for Go that recommends struct field rearrangements to provide for maximum space/allocation efficiency.
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betteralign - structs field alignment static analyzer for Go
For more gopls settings, you can see files in this folder: https://github.com/golang/tools/tree/master/gopls/doc
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Linter for explicit hint to interface which gets implemented.
But finding which interface is satisfied by a type is trivial anyways through gopls which integrates conveniently into any LSP supporting IDE (such as VSCode and Goland).
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Setting up helix for golang
You need to make sure you have Google's lsp server for golang installed.
What are some alternatives?
nvim-jdtls - Extensions for the built-in LSP support in Neovim for eclipse.jdt.ls
gofumpt - A stricter gofmt
coc-java - Java extension for coc.nvim
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
coc.nvim - Nodejs extension host for vim & neovim, load extensions like VSCode and host language servers.
goreturns - A gofmt/goimports-like tool for Go programmers that fills in Go return statements with zero values to match the func return types
IntelliJIDEA-Delightful - A charming and dazzling IntelliJ IDEA configuration!
GoLint - [mirror] This is a linter for Go source code. (deprecated)
NeoVim-Delightful - A charming and dazzling NeoVim configuration!
staticcheck
vscode-java - Java Language Support for Visual Studio Code
golines - A golang formatter that fixes long lines