The General preferences page includes the following settings:
Table 19-1 Preferences: General
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
|
Searches all the preferences and shortens the tree view, depending upon what you type in the edit box. |
Always run in background |
Enables operations to run in the background without disturbing you. |
Keep next/previous part dialog open |
Keeps the editor and view dialog boxes open when an activation key is released. Normally, the dialog box closes as soon as the key combination is released. |
Show heap status |
Places a field in Designer’s bottom right corner and displays the amount of memory being used of total memory available. |
Open mode: Double click |
Opens a project when you double-click it. |
Single click: Select on hover |
Selects the setting when the cursor hovers there. |
Single click: Open when using arrow keys |
Opens the setting when you select it. |
Additionally, the following preferences categories appear as General sub-pages:
Figure 19-1 Preferences: General > Appearance
Table 19-2 Preferences: General > Appearance
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Current Presentation |
Allows you to choose between Designer’s presentation, the current presentation, or the Eclipse 2.1 style presentation. |
Override presentation settings |
Alters how the tabs and views appear in the workbench |
Editor tab positions |
Positions tabs on the Modeler, NetIQ XML editor, or Text editor at the top or bottom. |
View tab positions |
Positions view tabs (for example, the Project view tab) at the top or bottom of views. |
Perspective switcher positions |
Positions the Perspective Switcher at the left, top left, or top right of the workbench. |
Show text on the perspective bar |
Determines whether text (for example, Designer) displays next to the icons in the Perspective Switcher. |
Current theme |
The general theme (colors and fonts) that Designer uses. Choices are Default (current), reduced palette, and R 3.0 theme. |
Show traditional style tabs |
Displays square Windows-style tabs. The alternative is rounded tabs. |
Enable animations |
Animates views (for example, Fast Views) and editors that you minimize, maximize, or restore. Reinforces tasks in Designer. |
Enable colored labels |
Displays colors on labels, if the labels have colors defined. |
To change a color:
Under General, expand Appearances.
Select Colors and Fonts.
Expand an option (for example, Basic).
Select an item (for example, Active hyperlink text color).
Click the color button.
Select a color from the Color palette, then click OK.
To change a font:
Under General, expand Appearances.
Select Colors and Fonts.
Expand an option (for example, Basic).
Select an item (for example, Banner Font).
Click Change.
Select a font, style, and size, then click OK.
Label decorations display additional information about an item on its label or icon. Select the desired label decorations:
Binary Plug-in Projects
File Icons Based on Content Analysis
Java Method Override Indicator
Java Type Indicator
Linked Resources
Provisioning Element Decorator
This Eclipse functionality customizes the behavior of the comparison editor. When you select to compare or synchronize two or more resources in the Workbench, one or more comparison editors usually open.
Table 19-3 Preferences: General > Compare/Patch General Tab Settings
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Open structure compare automatically |
Makes visible an additional information area that shows differences in the underlying structure of the resources being compared. This information might not be available for all comparisons. The default is On. |
Show structure compare in Outline view when possible |
Displays the structure compare in the Outline view, whenever it is possible. |
Show additional compare information in the status line |
Causes the status line to display additional context information about the comparison. The default is Off. |
Ignore white space |
Causes the comparison to ignore differences that are white space characters (for example, spaces and tabs). Also causes differences in line terminators (LF versus CRLF) to be ignored. The default is Off. |
Automatically save dirty editors before patching |
Controls whether any unsaved changes are automatically saved before a patch is applied. The default is Off. |
Added/ Removed lines |
These options control whether a line is counted as added and removed when applying a patch. Both options use regular expressions. |
Filtered Members |
Specify names, separated by a comma, that are excluded from the Compare With Each Other option. |
You can change how the text is displayed in the compare option.
Table 19-4 Preferences: General > Compare/Patch Text Compare Settings
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Synchronize scrolling between panes in compare viewers |
The two comparison viewers lock scroll along with one another to keep identical and corresponding portions of the code in each pane side-by-side. Turn this option off if you don’t want the compare viewers to lock scroll. |
Initially show ancestor pane |
Sometimes you want to compare two versions of a resource with the previous version from which they were both derived. This is called their common ancestor, and it appears in its own comparison pane during a three way compare. Turn this option on if you want the ancestor pane to always appear at the start of a comparison. |
Show pseudo conflicts |
Displays pseudo conflicts, which occur when two developers make the same change. Turn this option on if you want pseudo conflicts to appear in compare browsers. |
Connect ranges with single line |
Controls whether differing ranges are visually connected by a single line or a range delimited by two lines. |
Highlight individual changes |
Controls whether the individual changes inside conflicts are highlighted. |
When the end/beginning is reached while navigating an element |
Use this option to configure what occurs when the end/beginning is reach while navigating an element. |
Table 19-5 Preferences: General > Content Types
Pane |
Description |
---|---|
Content types |
The type of content (for example, HTML or XML) that a file contains. |
File associations |
The file extension that is associated with a content type. For example, .xml is associated with a file that contains XML content. To add a file association:
|
Table 19-6 Preferences: General > Editors
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Size of recently opened files list |
The number of files to add to the file menu of recently opened files, which you can easily reopen. |
Show multiple editor tabs |
Displays tabs for all opened projects. If you deselect this option, only one editor tab displays, and an abbreviated name displays on the tab. |
Restore Editor state on startup |
Displays the editor in the same state as it was when last closed, as opposed to using default settings. |
Prompt to save on close even if still open elsewhere |
Saves the file on close even if the same file is open in another editor. |
Close editors automatically |
Automatically closes the first-opened editor when you open additional editors. This option prevents displaying too many editors and cluttering the workbench. |
Number of opened editors before closing |
Determines how many editors can be open. For example, if you specify two and then open a third project, the first-opened project automatically closes. |
When all editors are dirty or pinned |
Prompts you to save unsaved components in the project that is about to automatically close, or to open an additional editor. |
Enables you to associate editors (whether they are internally installed in the Designer, or an external application) with file types (extensions) so that you can edit files.
To find out which editor is associated with a file type, select the file type. For example, a .docgen file type is associated with the Style editor, but a .scriptpolicy file type is associated with the Policy Builder.
To associate an additional editor with a file type:
Select the file type.
In the Associated editors pane, click Add.
Select an additional editor, then click OK twice.
To add a file type:
In the File types pane, click Add.
Type the extension (for example, .doc) for the file type, then click OK.
In the Associated editors pane, click Add.
Select an editor for that file type, then click OK twice.
Enables you to configure Designer’s hex editor environment, including font, font style, and colors. You can also associate, or disassociate, the hex editor from Designer’s registered file extensions, and enable hex editor logging.
For information on structured text editors, refer to the Eclipse documentation.
Table 19-7 Preferences: General > Text Editors
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Undo history size |
Determines the size of the undo history. The default is 200 changes. |
Displayed tab width |
Specifies the number of characters or spaces in a tab character. The default is 4. The maximum is 16. |
Insert spaces for tabs |
Inserts the number of spaces specified in Displayed Tab Width, instead of a tab character, when you press the tab key in the text editor. |
Highlight current line |
Highlights the current line. |
Show print margin |
Displays the print margin on the right side of the text document. A vertical line identifies the margin. |
Show line numbers |
Numbers each line in the editor. |
Show range indicator |
Displays a range indicator. |
Show whitespace characters |
Displays white space characters so you can see them in the text editor. |
Enable drag and drop of text |
Allows you to drag and drop text within the text editor. |
Warn before editing a derived file |
Notifies you if you attempt to edit a file generated or maintained by the system. Your changes might be overwritten. |
Smart caret positioning at the line start and end |
Enables the Home and End commands to move to the first and last non-white-space character on a line. |
Show affordance in hover on how to make it sticky |
Enables the hover over text to grab the text and place it in the clipboard. |
Appearance color options |
Lets you configure the display settings for the text editor. Select a particular appearance characteristic from the list to view and change the display settings for that characteristic. |
For additional information on text editors, see the Eclipse documentation.
Enables you to view a table of all of the keyboard mappings, change those mappings, and add new mappings.
Enables you to configure a manual proxy configuration if you use a proxy server to access the Internet. For example, if you have added a custom URL for packages that require authentication, you must enter that information here so auto updates of packages works.
The three options are:
Table 19-8 Preferences: General Settings > Network Connections
Settings |
Description |
---|---|
System proxy configuration (if available) |
Specifies that the system proxy settings are used to access the Internet. If the settings can’t be retrieved, no proxy should be used. |
Direction connection to the Internet |
Select this option if no authentication information is required. This is the default option. |
Manual proxy configuration |
Specify that a proxy server is required to access the Internet. Select Enable proxy authentication if you have specified a URL that requires authentication. For example, if you have added a URL to download custom packages, you must specify the username and password here. |
Table 19-9 Preferences: General > Perspectives
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Open a new perspective |
In the same window: Places a new icon in the Perspective Switcher, so that you can toggle between perspectives in the same window. In a new window: Opens a new perspective in a different window. You can toggle between perspective windows by selecting icons on the taskbar. |
Open a new view |
Within the perspective: Opens the view so that it is contiguous to the Modeler. As fast view: Opens the view and places a Fast View in the bottom left corner of the perspective. |
Open the associated perspective when creating a new project |
Determines how and when you switch to an associated editor when you open a perspective. |
Available perspectives |
Designer is the default perspective. Other available perspectives are Eclipse Debug and Resource. |
Table 19-10 Preferences: General > Startup and Shutdown
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Prompt for workspace on startup |
Prompts you for a workspace folder. You can have multiple workspace folders and can specify a folder on startup. |
Refresh workspace on startup |
Synchronizes the workspace with resources (for example, myfile.xml) on disk. |
Confirm exit when closing last window |
Displays an Exit Designer? prompt when you exit Designer. |
Plug-ins activated on startup |
Lists plug-ins that are automatically loaded and registered. |
Table 19-11 Preferences: General > Web Browser
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Use internal Web browser |
Enables you to use an internal Web browser. |
Use external Web browser |
Enables you to add and use an external browser (for example, Netscape). If you enable this option, you must also enable Use External Browser in the Help section (also found in Preferences). |
External Web browsers |
Lists browsers. To add a browser:
|
Table 19-12 Preferences: General > Welcome
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Home: Home Page Theme |
Enables you to select the theme that appears when you click Help > Welcome. |
Home: Root Pages |
Adds tabs (for example, Overview) on the Welcome properties page. You add functionality by customizing these tabs. |
For information about the Overview and What’s New tabs, refer to the Eclipse documentation.