So here are the instructions on opening existing projects into Eclipse.
If you are a Visual Studio developer you are here because you can't open an existing project in Eclipse. You are probably 5 minutes away from giving up on eclipse and tweeting about how Eclipse sucks.
I was there too.
And then, after attempting it again and again, I finally figured it out. I am going to translate opening an existing project from Eclipse into Visual Studio here. Think about these two IDEs as cars: Visual Studio is an automatic, eclipse is manual transmission.
There are two things you got to know:
A) Workspace = Solution
B) You got to set it by hand
I normally don't think about the solution because Visual Studio lovingly just creates one for me. If I need to add projects to it, it can be done easily. It makes me happy; it has made you happy too. When it comes to creating solution and project spaces, Visual Studio is like an automatic car: it just does it for you.
But in eclipse you got to do it by hand. Maybe there is a plugin that will make it behave like Visual Studio, but in most distributions you will have to do it manually. It is not hard, but you got to do it. On this issue, eclipse is like a manual transmission car: you got to know and be aware of different gears and when to switch them.
So let's learn how to drive stick by learning how to set up your workspace/solution and how to add existing projects to it:
Create a new workspace by clicking
File -> Switch Workspaces -> Other
Browse to where you want your workspace (solution) folder to live in, where you have the existing project folder. This is the equivalent of Add Project in Visual Studio.
Add a project to the workspace by clicking
File-> Import-> General-> Import Existing Projects into Workspace
And navigate to the existing project root folder.
And you are done.
Now let's learn how to switch gears. In Visual Studio you will have your landing page with a list of previous projects. When you click on the project, the solution automatically switches. That is our automatic car. With our stick vehicle, to switch from one workspace(solution) to another you do it by clicking
File -> Switch Workspaces -> >>Select workspace that you want to go to<<
Remember, you got to manually change the workspace(solution). Attempting to switch solutions in the Visual Studio way, that is, by "opening" another project via project import, will result into adding that project into the workspace, not into an automatic workspace switch.
References:
I found the specific instructions on how to open an existing project on this book Android Application Development, 1st. Edition
NOTE:- ABOVE MENTIONED ARTICLE IS COPIED FROM
http://www.hugoestrada.net/node/121
If you are a Visual Studio developer you are here because you can't open an existing project in Eclipse. You are probably 5 minutes away from giving up on eclipse and tweeting about how Eclipse sucks.
I was there too.
And then, after attempting it again and again, I finally figured it out. I am going to translate opening an existing project from Eclipse into Visual Studio here. Think about these two IDEs as cars: Visual Studio is an automatic, eclipse is manual transmission.
There are two things you got to know:
A) Workspace = Solution
B) You got to set it by hand
I normally don't think about the solution because Visual Studio lovingly just creates one for me. If I need to add projects to it, it can be done easily. It makes me happy; it has made you happy too. When it comes to creating solution and project spaces, Visual Studio is like an automatic car: it just does it for you.
But in eclipse you got to do it by hand. Maybe there is a plugin that will make it behave like Visual Studio, but in most distributions you will have to do it manually. It is not hard, but you got to do it. On this issue, eclipse is like a manual transmission car: you got to know and be aware of different gears and when to switch them.
So let's learn how to drive stick by learning how to set up your workspace/solution and how to add existing projects to it:
Create a new workspace by clicking
File -> Switch Workspaces -> Other
Browse to where you want your workspace (solution) folder to live in, where you have the existing project folder. This is the equivalent of Add Project in Visual Studio.
Add a project to the workspace by clicking
File-> Import-> General-> Import Existing Projects into Workspace
And navigate to the existing project root folder.
And you are done.
Now let's learn how to switch gears. In Visual Studio you will have your landing page with a list of previous projects. When you click on the project, the solution automatically switches. That is our automatic car. With our stick vehicle, to switch from one workspace(solution) to another you do it by clicking
File -> Switch Workspaces -> >>Select workspace that you want to go to<<
Remember, you got to manually change the workspace(solution). Attempting to switch solutions in the Visual Studio way, that is, by "opening" another project via project import, will result into adding that project into the workspace, not into an automatic workspace switch.
References:
I found the specific instructions on how to open an existing project on this book Android Application Development, 1st. Edition
NOTE:- ABOVE MENTIONED ARTICLE IS COPIED FROM
http://www.hugoestrada.net/node/121
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