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Eclipse Plug-in Development Beginner's Guide

You're reading from   Eclipse Plug-in Development Beginner's Guide Extend and customize Eclipse

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783980697
Length 458 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Alex Blewitt Alex Blewitt
Author Profile Icon Alex Blewitt
Alex Blewitt
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Creating Your First Plug-in 2. Creating Views with SWT FREE CHAPTER 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 A. Using OSGi Services to Dynamically Wire Applications B. Pop Quiz Answers Index

Time for action – inspecting and watching variables

Finally, it's worth seeing what the Variables view can do.

  1. Create a breakpoint at the start of the execute method.
  2. Click on the hello world icon again.
  3. Highlight the openInformation call and navigate to Run | Step Into Selection.
  4. Select the title variable in the the Variables view.
  5. Modify where it says Hello in the bottom half of the variables view and change it to Goodbye:
    Time for action – inspecting and watching variables
  6. Save the value with Ctrl + S (or Cmd + S on macOS).
  7. Click on resume, and the newly updated title can be seen in the dialog.
  8. Click on the hello world icon again.
  9. With the debugger stopped in the execute method, highlight the event in the Variables view.
  10. Right-click on the value and choose Inspect (by navigating to Ctrl + Shift + I or Cmd + Shift + I on macOS) and the value is opened in the Expressions view:
    Time for action – inspecting and watching variables
  11. Click on Add new expression at the bottom of the Expressions view.
  12. Add new java.util.Date() and the right-hand side will show the current time.
  13. Right-click on the new java.util.Date() and choose Re-evaluate Watch Expression. The right-hand-side pane shows the new value.
  14. Step through the code line by line, and notice that the watch expression is re-evaluated after each step.
  15. Disable the watch expression by right-clicking on it and choosing Disable.
  16. Step through the code line by line, and the watch expression will not be updated.

What just happened?

The Eclipse debugger has many powerful features, and the ability to inspect (and change) the state of the program is one of the more important ones.

Watch expressions, when combined with conditional breakpoints, can be used to find out when data becomes corrupted or used to show the state of a particular object's value.

Expressions can also be evaluated based on objects in the variables view, and code completion is available to select methods, with the result being shown with Display.

Pop quiz: debugging

Q1. How can an Eclipse plug-in be launched in debug mode?

Q2. How can certain packages be avoided when debugging?

Q3. What are the different types of breakpoints that can be set?

Q4. How can a loop that only exhibits a bug after 256 iterations be debugged?

Q5. How can a breakpoint be set on a method when its argument is null?

Q6. What does inspecting an object do?

Q7. How can the value of an expression be calculated?

Q8. How can multiple statements be executed in breakpoint conditions?

Have a go hero – working with breakpoints

Using a conditional breakpoint to stop at a certain method is fine if the data is simple, but sometimes there needs to be more than one expression. Although it is possible to use multiple statements in the breakpoint condition definition, the code is not very reusable. To implement additional reusable functionality, the breakpoint can be delegated to a breakpoint utility class.

  1. Create a Utility class in the com.packtpub.e4.hello.ui.handlers package with a static method breakpoint that returns a true value if the breakpoint should stop, and false otherwise:
    public class Utility {
      public static boolean breakpoint() {
        System.out.println("Breakpoint");
        return false;
      }
    }
  2. Create a conditional breakpoint in the execute method that calls Utility.breakpoint().
  3. Click on the hello world icon again, and the message will be printed to the host Eclipse's Console view. The breakpoint will not stop.
  4. Modify the breakpoint method to return true instead of false. Run the action again. The debugger will stop.
  5. Modify the breakpoint method to take the message as an argument, along with a Boolean value that is returned to say whether the breakpoint should stop.
  6. Set up a conditional breakpoint with the expression:
    Utility.breakpoint(
     ((org.eclipse.swt.widgets.Event)event.trigger).stateMask != 0,
     "Breakpoint")
  7. Modify the breakpoint method to take a variable Object array, and use that in conjunction with the message to use String.format() for the resulting message:
    Utility.breakpoint(
     ((org.eclipse.swt.widgets.Event)event.trigger).stateMask != 0,
     "Breakpoint %s %h",
     event,
     java.time.Instant.now())
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