Eclipse Monitor Adapter Driverleadingdwnload

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Eclipse Monitor Adapter Driverleadingdwnload

An illustrated quick start guide

Apache Tomcat makes hosting your applications easy. The Eclipse IDE makes development easy. It's simple math. If you haven't integrated Tomcat into your Eclipse environment, you're losing out on some great enhancements to your development process.

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Imagine being able to write a new servlet, deploy it to a Tomcat server, test it, make changes, redeploy, and restart Tomcat - all within Eclipse, all without editing a single XML file by hand. Time-saver? Sanity-preserver? All of the above? You bet. Here's an easy guide to getting Tomcat and Eclipse working together, from installing the Tomcat plug-in, to configuring your first server.

In the interest of simplicity, this tutorial assumes that you've already installed:

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  • a JDK of version 1.4.2 or higher
  • the Tomcat version of your choice (version 5.5.x or higher is recommended)
  • Eclipse 3.1 or higher, along with the EMF (Eclipse Modeling Framework), GEF (Graphical Editing Framework), and JEM (Java EMF Model) components

Eclipse Dual Monitor Adapter

If you need more information on installing these items, visit the Eclipse and Apache Tomcat documentation pages. And to make your Apache Tomcat environment enterprise ready, learn more about Tcat, the leading enterprise Apache Tomcat application server.

Triton monitor adapter driver download

Step one - Installing the eclipse web tools platform

Eclipse uses a set of components called the Web Tools Platform, or WTP, to integrate application servers into the Eclipse environment. Although you can download WTP as a ZIP file, it's quite easy to install from within Eclipse, and this is the method we'll use in this tutorial.

To install WTP, select the 'Install New Software..' menu item from the Eclipse 'Help' menu. This will call up the dialog pictured below:

Click the 'Work with:' drop down menu, and select the WTP Project site from the list:

Next, select the latest version of the WTP SDK from the list of projects. In this tutorial, we'll use version 3.x:

Click 'Next'. Eclipse will fetch a list of components to be installed, and present them to you. You can review them if you want, but it's not necessary. Click 'Next' again to reach the page 'Review Licenses'. Click the radio button in the lower right hand corner of the screen, indicating that you accept the licensing terms for the components that you are about to install (you only need to do this once), and the 'Finish' button will become active.

Once you click the 'Finish' button, Eclipse will begin downloading the components and installing them:

This process will take some time, so get up and go for a stroll. If you get any dialogues about installing unsigned content, don't worry - just click 'OK'.

At the end of the install process, Eclipse will give you the option to either restart, or apply the changes without restarting. Be safe - restart. It'll only take a few seconds, and when Eclipse starts up again, you'll be almost ready to start using Tomcat with Eclipse!

Creating your first Tomcat-integrated Eclipse project

Now that you've installed the WTP, it's time to start using Tomcat with Eclipse. Start clicking 'File-->New' and selecting 'Dynamic Web Project' from the list of options. Eclipse will present you with this dialogue window:

This dialogue should be familiar to you if you have used Eclipse before. What we're concerned with is the 'Target runtime' box. Click 'New..' to pull up the following dialogue:

Open the Apache folder, and select the version of Tomcat you've installed on your system. For this example, we'll be using Tomcat 6. If you want to create a new local server for your project, check the box below the list of server runtimes. Click 'Next', and Eclipse will ask you to locate your installation of Tomcat:

Click 'Finish', configure any additional options you like on the New Dynamic Web Project dialogue screen, click 'Finish' one more time, and you're done. Congratulations - you've created your first Tomcat-integrated Eclipse project.

Configuring a Tomcat server in Eclipse

Eclipse Vga Adapter Driver

Now that you've created a Tomcat-aware project, you still need to define a Tomcat server for the project to use. You can do this in the 'Server' tab, located in the lower half of Eclipse's development screen by default. Secondary click inside the tab to open the New Server dialogue:

On the next screen, choose a local name for your new server, as well as a Server name, and click Finish. If you did everything correctly, a new Server will appear in the Server list. Double-clicking on the server's name will call up a window in which you can edit basic information about the server:

You can also edit Tomcat's Configuration files within Eclipse by selecting them from the Servers drop-down menu in Project Explorer, located on the left hand side of Eclipse's development view:

Running an application on your Tomcat server

Now that you've configured a Tomcat Server for use in your Eclipse project, you can deploy whatever test application you choose to build on the server simply by starting the Server, right-clicking the application in the Project Explorer pane, and choosing Run On Server from the 'Run As..' menu option:

That's the basics - the rest is up to you! For more information about using Eclipse with Apache Tomcat, visit the WTP Tomcat FAQ page.

Home » Newcomers » Newcomers » Dual Monitors(How to get Eclipse to occupy both monitors)
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Dual Monitors[message #1734803]Mon, 13 June 2016 02:21
Chuck Pergiel
Messages: 30
Registered: April 2016
Location: Silicon Forest
I have two monitors. After some mucking about with xandr and arandr I can now use either one. I can slide a non-maximized window from one to the other. Maximize a window and it fills one screen. I want to use both screens, one for code and one for all the other window-lettes. Is this possible?
Sent from my Commodore-64 via a US Robotics 300 Baud Modem
Re: Dual Monitors[message #1734805 is a reply to message #1734803]Mon, 13 June 2016 04:09
Russell Bateman
Messages: 3798
Registered: July 2009
Location: Provo, Utah, USA

On 06/12/2016 08:21 PM, Chuck Pergiel wrote:
> I have two monitors. After some mucking about with xandr and arandr I
> can now use either one. I can slide a non-maximized window from one to
> the other. Maximize a window and it fills one screen. I want to use both
> screens, one for code and one for all the other window-lettes. Is this
> possible?
Yes, have you looked in Help to find out how to float an editor window
outside the workbench?
Re: Dual Monitors[message #1734910 is a reply to message #1734805]Mon, 13 June 2016 15:51
Chuck Pergiel
Messages: 30
Registered: April 2016
Location: Silicon Forest
Reading help, that only seems to apply to system editors, not to the native eclipse editor.
Sent from my Commodore-64 via a US Robotics 300 Baud Modem
Re: Dual Monitors[message #1734911 is a reply to message #1734910]Mon, 13 June 2016 16:00
Ed Merks
Messages: 31707
Registered: July 2009
No, you can drag an editor's tab and drop it outside of the Eclipse
window boundary to create a floating editor window. You can have
multiple such floating windows or you can drop several tabs into a
single floating window.
Of course you can use Window -> New Window to create multiple Eclipse
windows, each of which could show a different perspective. And of
course you can tailor what's in a perspective too.
On 13.06.2016 17:51, Chuck Pergiel wrote:
> Reading help, that only seems to apply to system editors, not to the
> native eclipse editor.

Ed Merks
Professional Support: https://www.macromodeling.com/
Re: Dual Monitors[message #1734913 is a reply to message #1734910]Mon, 13 June 2016 16:06
Russell Bateman
Messages: 3798
Registered: July 2009
Location: Provo, Utah, USA

On 06/13/2016 09:51 AM, Chuck Pergiel wrote:
> Reading help, that only seems to apply to system editors, not to the
> native eclipse editor.
(Sorry for the abbreviated response. I was at a music festival on my phone.)
Go to Window -> New Window.
This will in essence clone your workbench. Then you can put the new
window (or the old one) on your second monitor.
Caution: as this clones the whole workbench, changes you make there, for
example, in layout, will be saved if you kill the original workbench
before exiting from the new one you modified. I'm not crazy about how
this works, but as long as this capability has been there in Eclipse,
this has been the side effect. I just treat my original workbench copy
as 'sacred' and I am careful about killing copies first before shutting
down Eclipse.
Re: Dual Monitors[message #1734914 is a reply to message #1734911]Mon, 13 June 2016 16:08
Russell Bateman
Messages: 3798
Registered: July 2009
Location: Provo, Utah, USA

On 06/13/2016 10:00 AM, Ed Merks wrote:
> No, you can drag an editor's tab and drop it outside of the Eclipse
> window boundary to create a floating editor window. You can have
> multiple such floating windows or you can drop several tabs into a
> single floating window.
>
> Of course you can use Window -> New Window to create multiple Eclipse
> windows, each of which could show a different perspective. And of
> course you can tailor what's in a perspective too.
>
>
> On 13.06.2016 17:51, Chuck Pergiel wrote:
>> Reading help, that only seems to apply to system editors, not to the
>> native eclipse editor.
>
Note: I tried that this morning just to make sure and the drag didn't
take. Maybe my Fedora 22 running Cinnamon got up on the wrong side of
the bed. Hence, the answer I gave in order to be sure. Sorry for being
incomplete. This is what I usually do; it just didn't work this morning.
Re: Dual Monitors[message #1734921 is a reply to message #1734914]Mon, 13 June 2016 18:14
Chuck Pergiel
Messages: 30
Registered: April 2016
Location: Silicon Forest
OK! I have Eclipse open on one screen, and an Eclipse editor window open on the other screen. Vunderbar!
It isn't totally obvious how it works.
- de-maximized Eclips
- drag the help box tab off of the Eclipse window. Rectangular outline shows up spread over both screens. Release and the help box is free.
- dragged a text box tab off of the Eclipse window. Nothing shows except the mouse cursor. Release and the editor box appears, free of the Eclipse frame.
So maybe I just wasn't holding my mouth right.
Or maybe the system and Eclipse updates I just installed had something to do with it.
Software is so weird. The basic principles don't change, but all the little mouse and keyboard actions that make for smooth operation need to be relearned every time you change systems.

Sent from my Commodore-64 via a US Robotics 300 Baud Modem
Eclipse
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