The Spket IDE is currently the most Outstanding IDE for EXT 2.0 support. Official website http://www.spket.com. It uses the. JSB project file and embeds the contents of the base class and all documents into the script that generates the code hint. Doc.
Since Spket is just a simple editor with no other formatting support (such as CSS), my approach is to use its Eclipse plug-in form, and of course it can be installed as a tool for editing JS.
As an Eclipse plug-in installation is very simple, Spket download is a jar file, mine is Spket-1.6.11.jar, directly under the console input Java-jar Spket-1.6.11.jar, will pop up an interface, select Next
This allows you to choose whether to install separately as a rich client or as an Eclipse plug-in, select Eclipse Plugin, where you will choose Eclipse's installation directory, browse Eclipse's installation directory, press the Next button to install, and after installation, Restart Eclipse (the plug-in will be loaded automatically, or the Eclipse-clean Eclipse boot can be reinitialized using the command.)
Set up in Eclipse after installation:
Window→preferences→spket→javascript. Profiles→new;
Enter "ExtJS" click OK;
Select "ExtJS" and click "Add Library" and select "ExtJS" in the dropdown bar;
Select "ExtJS" and click "Add file" and select "EXT.JSB" file in your./ext-2.x/source directory.
Select the plugin you want to load
Set up a new ExtJS profile, select and click "JavaScript." Profiles "Defalut" button on the right-hand side of the dialog box;
JS open mode for window→preferences→general→editors→file ...
Select JS or the new creation setting defaults to open Spket JavaScript. Editor (default)
Ok I have successfully used MYECLIPSE6.0, open your JS bar. Let's have a little bit of ext. Properties support similar Java classes, after the declaration can get properties, Spket also encapsulates the JS common functions. EXT writing environment has been tied for a long time, but said Spket+ext is the most perfect to write ext environment.