Monday, April 28, 2014

Import Maven Projects from Github



  1. Checkout the source from github
    1. Switch to the Git Repository Exploring perspective in Eclipse.
    2. Click Clone a Git Repository and type the URI 
  2. Importing existing source into Eclipse
    1. Under the menu option File → Import, browse to the Maven→ Existing Maven Projects
    2. Enter the Root directory of the source tree and then select all the projects of interest:

    Monday, November 25, 2013

    Import Grails project from GitHub into Eclipse

    1. File -> Import -> Git -> Projects From Git > URI
    2. Enter the github repository URL. 
      You can get https URL from github repository page -> sidebar
    3. Select the branch you want to clone
    4. Select the local storage location for your new project
    5. Create a new groovy project. It will prompt you if you want to convert to grails project. Select yes.
      The location should be $ProjectRoot/src, the directroy that is the parent directory of grails-app!

    Tuesday, May 28, 2013

    How to change Eclipse to use spaces instead of tabs



    For the default text editor:
    • General > Editors > Text Editors > Insert spaces for tabs (check it)
    For PHP:
    • PHP > Code Style > Formatter > Tab policy (choose "spaces")
    • PHP > Code Style > Formatter > Indentation size (set to 4)
    For CSS:
    • Web > CSS > Editor > Indent using spaces (select it)
    • Web > CSS > Editor > Indentation size (set to 4)
    For HTML:
    • Web > HTML > Editor > Indent using spaces (select it)
    • Web > HTML > Editor > Indentation size (set to 4)
    For XML:
    • XML > XML Files > Editor > Indent using spaces (select it)
    • XML > XML Files > Editor > Indentation size (set to 4)
    For Javascript:
    • Javascript > Preferences > Code Style > Formatter > Edit > Indentation (choose "spaces only")
    • Rename the formatter settings profile to save it
    For Java:
    • Java > Preferences > Code Style > Formatter > Edit > Indentation (choose "spaces only")
    • Rename the formatter settings profile to save it

    To search for all the tabs in eclipse.
    Search > File > search for containing text "\t" and select Regular expression > Search

    To replace tab with spaces
    Search > File > search for containing text "\t" and select Regular expression > Replace > Enter 4 spaces.

    Wednesday, May 1, 2013

    Regular Expression


    Lookahead

    • q(?=u)  : quit
    • q(?!u)  : qtip  not quit


    LookBehind

    • (?<=a)b  :  abc
    • (?<!a)b  :  xbc not ab



    • ^ matches at the start of the string
    • $ matches at the end of the string
    • \d matches a single character that is a digit
    • \w matches a "word character" (alphanumeric characters plus underscore)
    • \s matches a whitespace character
    • The dot matches a single character, except line break characters. It is short for [^\n] (UNIX regex flavors) or[^\r\n] (Windows regex flavors).gr.y matches graygreygr%y, etc.

    Thursday, January 24, 2013

    Spring 3.1 registering and using properties

    Registering properties in Spring 

    Starting with Spring 3.1, the new Environment and PropertySource abstractions simplify working with properties. The default Spring Environment now contains two property sources: the System properties and the JVM properties, with the System properties having precedence.

    (1) Registering Properties via the XML namespace:
      <context:property-placeholder location="classpath:config/${env:local}/**/*.properties" ignore-unresolvable="true"/>  
    

    (2) Registering Properties via Java Annotation:(2) 
     @PropertySource("classpath:config/${env:local}/environment.properties")  
    

    Spring 3.1 introduces the new @PropertySource annotation, as a convenient mechanism of adding property sources to the environment. But as opposed to using XML namespace element, the Java @PropertySource annotation does not automatically register a PropertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer with Spring.

    Instead, the bean must be explicitly defined in the configuration to get the property resolution mechanism working.
       @Bean  
       public static PropertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer propertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer() {  
       return new PropertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer();  
       }  
    

    Note: Resource location wildcards (e.g. **/*.properties) are not permitted; each location must evaluate to exactly one .properties resource.  So if you want to use wildcards in your propertySource, don't  use Method 2).

    (3)  Registering Properties via Java configuration:
       static @Bean public PropertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer myPropertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer() throws IOException {  
         String envVar = System.getenv("env");   
         if (envVar == null)   
           envVar = "local";  
         PropertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer p = new PropertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer();  
         p.setLocations(new PathMatchingResourcePatternResolver()  
                 .getResources("classpath*:config/"+envVar+"/*.properties"));  
         p.setIgnoreUnresolvablePlaceholders(true);  
         return p;  
       }  
    

    Using properties in Spring 

     Both the older PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer and the new PropertySourcesPlaceholderConfigurer added in Spring 3.1 resolve ${…} placeholders within bean definition property values and @Value annotations.

    For example, to inject a property using the @Value annotation:
     @Value( "${jdbc.url}" )  
     private String jdbcUrl;  
    

    Using properties in Spring XML configuration:
     <bean id="dataSource">  
      <property name="url" value="${jdbc.url}" />  
     </bean>  
    

    And lastly, obtaining properties via the new Environment APIs:
     @Autowired  
     private Environment env;  
     ...  
     dataSource.setUrl(env.getProperty("jdbc.url"));  
    




    Friday, January 18, 2013

    MongoDB


    Default
     <mongo:mongo write-concern="SAFE" />  
     <mongo:db-factory id="mongoDbFactory"  
            host="localhost"  
            port="27017"  
            dbname="database"  
            username="joe"  
            password="secret"/>  
     <bean id="mongoTemplate">  
          <constructor-arg name="mongoDbFactory" ref="mongoDbFactory"/>  
     </bean>  
    

     mongo = new Mongo();  
     mongoDbFactory = new SimpleMongoDbFactory(mongo, "dbname");  
     mongoTemplate = new MongoTemplate(mongoDbFactory());