diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'usth/ICT2.7/P1L3 Integrated Development Environment Subtitles/4 - Plug-Ins - lang_en_vs5.srt')
-rw-r--r-- | usth/ICT2.7/P1L3 Integrated Development Environment Subtitles/4 - Plug-Ins - lang_en_vs5.srt | 99 |
1 files changed, 99 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/usth/ICT2.7/P1L3 Integrated Development Environment Subtitles/4 - Plug-Ins - lang_en_vs5.srt b/usth/ICT2.7/P1L3 Integrated Development Environment Subtitles/4 - Plug-Ins - lang_en_vs5.srt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..040293e --- /dev/null +++ b/usth/ICT2.7/P1L3 Integrated Development Environment Subtitles/4 - Plug-Ins - lang_en_vs5.srt @@ -0,0 +1,99 @@ +1 +00:00:00,110 --> 00:00:03,134 +In fact most IDEs are extensible through the use of + +2 +00:00:03,134 --> 00:00:06,158 +plug-ins. And by the way, note that plug-ins might be + +3 +00:00:06,158 --> 00:00:09,326 +called differently on different platforms. For example, if you're using + +4 +00:00:09,326 --> 00:00:12,970 +a Microsoft Visual Studio, plug-ins are normally called add-ins, but + +5 +00:00:12,970 --> 00:00:15,598 +the concept is more or less the same. So, what + +6 +00:00:15,598 --> 00:00:18,555 +is a plug-in? Well, let's imagine our IDE to be + +7 +00:00:18,555 --> 00:00:22,320 +this box. A plug-in is additional functionality that you can + +8 +00:00:22,320 --> 00:00:25,430 +actually plug into this box so that this box starts + +9 +00:00:25,430 --> 00:00:28,830 +offering more features to the user. For example, you + +10 +00:00:28,830 --> 00:00:32,850 +can add to Eclipse the Checkstyle plug-in. Which, paraphrasing the + +11 +00:00:32,850 --> 00:00:35,950 +Checkstyle website, helps you ensure that your Java code + +12 +00:00:35,950 --> 00:00:38,890 +complies with a set of coding standards by inspecting the + +13 +00:00:38,890 --> 00:00:41,690 +code and pointing out items that deviate from a + +14 +00:00:41,690 --> 00:00:44,870 +defined set of coding rules. Again, this is a functionality + +15 +00:00:44,870 --> 00:00:47,330 +the core of Eclipse doesn't have. You can add + +16 +00:00:47,330 --> 00:00:50,600 +the Checkstyle plug-in, and this functionality will become available in + +17 +00:00:50,600 --> 00:00:54,840 +the IDE. Another example of plug-in is the EGit plug-in which + +18 +00:00:54,840 --> 00:00:58,660 +adds support for the Git version control system in Eclipse. And + +19 +00:00:58,660 --> 00:01:01,290 +actually this is something that we'll cover in detail, we'll have + +20 +00:01:01,290 --> 00:01:04,150 +a demo, and we will actually use it throughout the class, so + +21 +00:01:04,150 --> 00:01:07,018 +I'm not going to say anything more about the EGit plug-in for + +22 +00:01:07,018 --> 00:01:09,300 +now. But again, what the plug-in will do is to add + +23 +00:01:09,300 --> 00:01:13,220 +the Git functionality to Eclipse. A functionality that is not in + +24 +00:01:13,220 --> 00:01:16,110 +the core of Eclipse and that is available to the user after + +25 +00:01:16,110 --> 00:01:17,181 +you add the plug-in. |