Eclipse Workspace Dock Badge For Mac Os X

IMPORTANT: For those using Mac OS X Mountain Lion (10.8). When you launch Eclipse for the first time, you may see the message 'Eclipse can't be opened because it is from an unidentified developer.' To launch Eclipse for the first time, press the control key, click on the Eclipse icon, and select Open. Using the Mac OS X terminal It is possible to compile and run your Java programs directly on the command line. This allows you to do things not possible in the Eclipse IDE such as reading from standard input or piping information between programs. To start the Mac OS X terminal, launch Go - Applications - Utilities - Terminal. Drag the entire eclipse folder to your Applications folder. You have just installed Eclipse on your Mac. Launch Eclipse from your dock. Each time you run Eclipse, you will be prompted to select a workspace. The default workspace is: /Users//Documents/workspace. Use this as the default and do not ask again.

  1. Eclipse Workspace Dock Badge For Mac Os X 10 11
  2. Eclipse Workspace Dock Badge For Mac Os X 10.13

Eclipse Workspace Dock Badge For Mac Os X 10 11

Install a new version of Eclipse to use with C++

You may want to print these instructions before proceeding, so that you can refer to them while downloading and installing MinGW and Eclipse. Or, just keep this document in your browser. You should read each step completely before performing the action that it describes.

Eclipse: Version 4.5 (Mars)

The Eclipse download requires about 200 MB of disk space; keep it on your machine, in case you need to re-install Eclipse. When installed, Eclipse requires an additional 200 MB of disk space.

Downloading

  1. Click Eclipse

    The top of the following page will appear in your browser.

    In this handout we will download Eclipse Standard 4.5 for Mac OS X 64 Bit; if your computer uses Mac OS X (Cocoa), continue below; otherwise look for the pull-down list showing Mac OS X (Cocoa) and instead choose either Windows or Linux and then continue below.

  2. Click the 64 Bit (under Mac OS X) under the heading Eclipse IDE for C/C++ Developers (the fourth selection from the top).

    You will see the following page (don't worry about the name of the institution underneath the orange DOWNLOAD button).

  3. Click the orange DOWNLOAD button. The site named here, in orange, underneath the DOWNLOAD button: United States - Indiana Unversity (http) is the random one chosen by the download page this time; yours may differ.

    This file should start downloading in your standard download folder. This file is about 200 Mb so it might take a while to download fully if you are on a slow internet connection (it took me about 5 minutes over a cable modem). Don't worry about the exact time as long as the download continues to make steady progress. In Chrome progress is shown on the bottom-left of the window, via the icon

    The file should appear as

    Terminate the window browsing the Eclipse download.

  4. Move this file to a more permanent location, so that you can install Eclipse (and reinstall it later, if necessary).
  5. Start the Installing instructions directly below.

Installing

  1. Double click the file eclipse-cpp-mars-R-macosx-cocoa-x86_64.tar.gz, the file that you just downloaded and moved. It will unzip the file and create an Eclipse application, which appears as

    Move this application into the Applications folder and put it on the dock for simple access. Now you are ready to perform a one-time only setup of Eclipse on your machine.

  2. Double-click the Eclipse icon on the Dock that you just created above.

    The following pop-up window will appear

    (note it says Eclipse Cpp here, because I already have Eclipse installed for my work with Python, so on my machine I renamed this application Eclipse Cpp.

  3. Click Open.

    The following splash screen will appear

    and then a Workspace Launcher pop-up window will appear.

    In the Workspace text box, your login name should appear between /users and /Documentsworkspace, instead of my name, richardepattis.

    Leave unchecked the Use this as the default and do not ask again box. Although you will use this same workspace for the entire quarter (checking projects in and out of it), it is best to see this Workspace Launcher pop-up window each time you start Eclipse, to remind you where your workspace is located.

  4. Click OK.

    Progress bars will appear at the bottom of the spash screen as Eclipse loads.

    Eventually the Eclipse workbench will appear with a Welcome tab covering it.

  5. Terminate (click X on) the Welcome tab.

    You will not see the Welcome tab when you start Eclipse after this first time. You should now see the following Eclipse workbench.

    Notice the C/C++ words/icon appear on the top left (in the Window title-bar) and below the upper right-hand corner (beneath the tool-bar).

Eclipse is now installed for C++.

Xcode

In this section we will download/install Eclipse Workspace Dock Badge For Mac Os X

Eclipse Workspace Dock Badge For Mac Os X 10.13

EclipseXcode. Before downloading Xcode (this software is free) you must have an itunes account.
  1. Download/Install Xcode by opening a browser and pasting the following url: https://developer.apple.com/xcode/downloads/.

    It will pop-up the following Developer window.

  2. Click the View in Mac App Store > link. It will bring pop-up the following itunes window
  3. Click the Get button (underneath the hammer). The pop-up window will change to
  4. Click the Install App button (same location).
    When I did this, I received the following message in a pop-up window (because I am running Mac OS 10.9.5).

    At this point I clicked OK and returned to the original Xcode window, scrolled to the bottom (left), and clicked on the Additional Tools link. I was redirected to login with my Apple ID.

    I entered my Apple ID and password and clicked Sign In.
    Next a pop-up window with an Apple Developer Agreement appeared; I scrolled to the bottom.

    I clicked the box binding me to the agreement and clicked the Submit button.
    Next a pop-up window with various developer tools appeared. I scrolled down to Xcode 5.1 (dated April 9, 2014) and clicked on the + to disclose the Xcode 5.1.1.dmg link.

    I clicked this link; note the download occupies 2.1Gb of storage: my download took 30 minutes. Then I double clicked the downloaded .dmg file and a pop-window showed itself briefly.

    Then a pop-window window asked me to drag/drop Xcode to the Applications folder.

    I dragged/dropped Xcode to the Applications folder, and a pop-up window showed itself during the copying.

    Then I repeated these steps for Xcode's command line developer tools. I scrolled to Command Line Tools (OS X 10.9) for Xcode - September 2014 (dated September 1, 2014) and clicked on the + to disclose the link.

    I clicked this link; note the download occupies 102Mb of storage: my download took just a few minutes. Then I double clicked the downloaded .dmg file and a pop-window showed itself briefly, followed by the following pop-up window.

    I double clicked the icon and the following pop-up window appeared, with the word Introduction highlighed.

    I clicked the Continue button, and following pop-up window appeared, with the word License highlighed.

    I clicked the Continue button, and following pop-up window appeared

    I clicked the Agreee button, and following pop-up window appeared, with the word Installation Type highlighed (it skipped highlighing the Destination Select.

    (this image appears to be missing)
    I clicked the Install button, and following pop-up window appeared.

    I entered my password and clicked the Install Software button, and following pop-up window appeared, showing the installation progress.

    Eventually, that window was replaced with the following pop-up window with the word Summary highlighed.

    I clicked the Close button and terminate the Command Line Developer Tools window.

  5. Open a terminal and type (don't copy/paste) to its prompt: xcode-select --install as shown below.

    I pressed return and following pop-up window appeared

    I clicked the Install button, and following pop-up window appeared.

    I clicked the Agreee button, and following pop-up window appeared briefly.

    When it disappers, the following pop-up window appeared.

    I clicked the Done button. Then I closed the terminal window.

  6. Go the the Launchpad and double click the Xcode icon. The following pop-up window will appear briefly

    It is replaced by the following pop-up window.

  7. Click Open. The following pop-up window will appear

    Click Agree. The following pop-up window appeared.

    I entered my password and clicked OK. The following pop-up window will appear briefly

    It is replaced by the following pop-up window.

    Click Open Other and the following pop-up window will appear (yours might have diffierent documents, but it should show the workspace that you created when you started Eclipse). Click that workspace (to select it) and click Open.

    KLUDGE: is this necessary? Could I have dismissed this window and still have run the code?

The require Xcode software is now installed.

Eclipse Verification

In this section we will Eclipse/C++ is working correctly.
  1. Re-open Eclipse if it is not open.
  2. Start a new project by clicking on the 'down-pointing' black triangle to the right of the left-most icon on the Eclipse tool-bar (not at the top of the screen, but on the window runnin Eclipse). Fill in the Project Name as test; in Project type ensure Empty Porject is selected; in Toolchains ensure MacOSX GCC is selection. The pop-up window should appear as

    Click Finish.

  3. Right click the test folder and select Source File as shown in the window below.
  4. Enter trivial.cpp after Source file: as shown in the window below.

    Click the Finish button.

  5. Copy/paste the following text starting at line 8 in the trivial.cpp editor.
  6. Right click in the *trivial.cpp editor tab and select Save.

    The * in the editor tab (meaning the file is unsaved) should disappear.

  7. Click the hammer (or right-click the test folder and select Build Project) and the Console window at the bottom (click it if it is not active) should show a successful build.
  8. Right click in the trivial.cpp editor and select Run as and then 1 Local C/C++ Application. The Console window should show a successful run. You can run this application in the future by clicking the right-pointing white triange in the green circle (the leftmost one of the three).

You have now verified the installation of Eclipse for C++.