Book Image

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

By : Alex Blewitt
Book Image

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

By: Alex Blewitt

Overview of this book

Eclipse is used by everyone from indie devs to NASA engineers. Its popularity is underpinned by its impressive plug-in ecosystem, which allows it to be extended to meet the needs of whoever is using it. This book shows you how to take full advantage of the Eclipse IDE by building your own useful plug-ins from start to finish. Taking you through the complete process of plug-in development, from packaging to automated testing and deployment, this book is a direct route to quicker, cleaner Java development. It may be for beginners, but we're confident that you'll develop new skills quickly. Pretty soon you'll feel like an expert, in complete control of your IDE. Don't let Eclipse define you - extend it with the plug-ins you need today for smarter, happier, and more effective development.
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
Index

Using Maven to build Eclipse plug-ins with Tycho


Maven is an automated build tool that builds using a file called pom.xml, which declaratively specifies how and what to build. Maven projects have a group, an artifact, and a version that identify them in repositories such as the Central Repository, and a packaging type that tells Maven what it is trying to build. The default is jar since the widest use for Maven is for building Java archives; for Tycho, we need to use Eclipse-specific types.

Maven Tycho is a set of plug-ins that allow the building of Eclipse plug-ins. Tycho requires at least Maven 3 to work; the instructions in this chapter have been tested with Maven 3.3.9 and Tycho 0.25.0. Check out the book's errata page for up-to-date information.