Max Rydahl Andersen wrote:
that is also my understanding.
Rob, could you show the *exact* code you have done which doesn't store
it ?
Rob seems to be sleeping ;)
here is this code:
String qualifier =
ESBProjectCorePlugin.getDefault().getDescriptor().getUniqueIdentifier();
IScopeContext context = new ProjectScope(project);
IEclipsePreferences node = context.getNode(qualifier);
if (node != null)
node.putDouble(IJBossESBFacetDataModelProperties.ESB_PROJECT_VERSION, 2.0);
when retrieve the value:
IProject p = getProject();
String qualifier =
ESBProjectCorePlugin.getDefault().getDescriptor().getUniqueIdentifier();
IScopeContext context = new ProjectScope(p);
IEclipsePreferences node = context.getNode(qualifier);
if (node != null) {
double d =
node.getDouble(IJBossESBFacetDataModelProperties.ESB_PROJECT_VERSION, 1.0);
Denny
/max
Alexey Kazakov wrote:
> We use exactly the same method, which you mentioned, to store Seam
> project settings in .setting folder.
> See
> org.jboss.tools.seam.ui.preferences.SeamSettingsPreferencePage.storeSettings()
>
> Rob Stryker wrote:
>
>> Hi All:
>>
>> I previously thought using an project-scoped preference eclipse
>> preference node would properly store the data in your project so that
>> the preference is a per-project setting and so that also these
>> preferences can be shared.
>>
>> This is not the case, as from this article:
>>
>> * /Project scope/. This scope stores values that are specific to a
>> single project in your workspace, such as code formatter and
>> compiler settings. Note that this scope is provided by the
>> org.eclipse.core.resources plug-in, which is not included in the
>> Eclipse Rich Client Platform. This scope will not exist in
>> applications that don� explicitly include the resources plug-in.
>>
>> Settings saved in the following method, while on a project-scope, are
>> still saved in the workspace, which means they're not persisted to cvs /
>> svn / etc.
>>
>> IScopeContext context = new ProjectScope(project);
>> IEclipsePreferences node = context.getNode(qualifier);
>> if (node != null)
>> node.putDouble(IJBossESBFacetDataModelProperties.ESB_PROJECT_VERSION, 2.0);
>>
>>
>> Does anyone know how to actually put some settings inside the .settings
>> folder of a project the way JDT and WTP do? Thanks.
>>
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>>
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>>
>>
>
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