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Ten coolest Eclipse 3.2 features

By | July 3, 2006, 2:22pm PDT

Summary: Eclipse 3.2 was released Friday along with 9 other projects that make up the Callisto Release train. The new release of Eclipse has hundreds of new features that have been developed over the past year since 3.1 came out. For this article I pick out 10 of my favorite features in 3.2 to whet your appetite and give you a reason to upgrade…

Eclipse 3.2 was released FridayEclipse Callisto along with 9 other projects that make up Callisto. A minimal configuration for Java development weighs in at around 52M. If you want source code and plug-in development, or other Callisto projects such as C/C++ Tools or Web Tools then that’s extra. But unlike previous releases, you don’t have to try to mix-and-match plug-ins of various version numbers. Everything that came out on Callisto day is synchronized to work together.

The new release of Eclipse has hundreds of new featuresEclipse 3.2 adds all this while being faster than 3.1 and taking less memory. that have been developed over the past year since 3.1 came out. I’ve written about many of the Java development features in a separate article, and eclipse.org has also published a New and Noteworthy page that goes into a lot of them. For this article I wanted to pick out 10 of my favorite features in 3.2 (not just in the JDT) to whet your appetite and give you a reason to upgrade.

1. Refactoring scripts and API-awareness

Let’s say you need to replace a method your public Java API with a new method. In Eclipse 3.2, when you rename the method you can have it automatically:

  • keep the original method as a delegate to call the renamed method,
  • mark the original method as deprecated, and
  • export this refactorization and others in a script as part of your Jar file

When users of the Jar file import the new version, they can run your refactoring script to apply whatever changes are needed to adapt to the new version. 

Burnette_jar-export.png
 

Topics

Ed Burnette is a software industry veteran with more than 25 years of experience as a programmer, author, and speaker. He has written numerous technical articles and books, most recently "Hello, Android: Introducing Google's Mobile Development Platform" from the Pragmatic Programmers.

Disclosure

Ed Burnette

Ed Burnette is a Manager of Mobile Development at SAS. However the postings on this site are his own and do not represent the positions, strategies, or opinions of his employer.

Biography

Ed Burnette

Ed Burnette has been hooked on computers ever since he laid eyes on a TRS-80 in the local Radio Shack. Since graduating from NC State University he has programmed everything from serial device drivers and debuggers to web servers. After a delightful break working on commercial video games, Ed reluctantly returned to business software. He currently develops enterprise software for Android phones and tablets.

In his copious spare time, Ed writes and speaks about all kinds of technology and software. His most recent books include the Eclipse IDE Pocket Guide from O'Reilly and Hello, Android: Introducing Google's Mobile Development Platform from the Pragmatic Programmers.

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Calisto rocks!
prime21 5th Jul 2006
Eclipse has done it again. 3.2 is awesome.
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Wicked Cool
D T Schmitz 3rd Jul 2006
Just installed last nite.
Keep the Eclipse articles coming!
Thanks Ed.
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Calisto rocks!
prime21 5th Jul 2006
Eclipse has done it again. 3.2 is awesome.

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