Reputation: 31
I'm developing tow eclipse plugin, I have the next problem:
I have two perspective that manages the same files. I would like to make an association between file extension - editor - perspective.
I mean if I open the file extension .XXX in perspective 1 it uses the editor A, but if I open the same file extension .XXX in perspective 2, it uses the editor B.
is it possible? Since now, I used the launcher but now I need more differentiation.
Thanks.
Upvotes: 3
Views: 2333
Reputation: 63932
Other option may be programmatically change file type association with Java code shown in
Eclipse RCP: programmatically associate file type with Editor?
Then there is only a question how to execute that code on perspective change event.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 5310
While I agree that this seems a little strange to have the default editor be different for the same file based on the open perspective, here is how you could do it.
Update #1 added some examples
There are some online tutorials for this. But here is some example code to make it easier to see what work is required. Here is how you declare your content types (you would need two of them)
<plugin>
<extension
point="org.eclipse.core.contenttype.contentTypes">
<content-type
base-type="org.eclipse.core.runtime.xml"
describer="com.liferay.ide.core.FirstContentTypeDescriber"
id="com.liferay.ide.core.contentType1"
name="First Content Type"
priority="normal">
</content-type>
</extension>
</plugin>
Then in the Describer class you would do your matching logic. Then in the editor extension point you reference a content type instead of a file-name or extension like this:
<extension
point="org.eclipse.ui.editors">
<editor
class="com.liferay.ide.ui.FirstEditor"
default="false"
id="com.liferay.ide.ui.editor1"
name="My First Editor">
<contentTypeBinding
contentTypeId="com.liferay.ide.core.firstContentType">
</contentTypeBinding>
</editor>
</extension>
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 10203
(Sorry, this is one of those "don't do that!" non-answers. :))
As mentioned in the comments, I'd recommend against opening a different editor depending on the current perspective. I think that goes against the expectations of the user, and has some unintuitive consequences, e.g. when I create my own perspectives.
I'd recommend going the path of Eclipse' XML/Plug-in manifest editors, for example. Tabs at the bottom allow the user to choose between the different views, independent of any perspective choice or configuration.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 16142
I would recommend to rethink your approach, and take some cues from WindowBuilder: have one editor associated with the file type which opens a tabbed editor; if a second plugin is added, have it create a separate tab on the same editor.
Upvotes: 1