The plug-in Development Environment (PDE) provides some views to check all aspects of the plug-in. Select WINDOW> show View> other ...; In the show view pop-up box, expand the two entries, 'pd' and 'pd' runtime.
2.7.1 plug-in registration (plug-in registry) view
The plug-in registration view is displayed as a tree view that lists all the plug-ins found in the current workspace (Figure 2-24 ). expand the plug-in on the tree to display its components, such as extension points, extensions, dependent files, and runtime libraries. Select an element in the tree and display additional information on the right side of the book.
Figure 2-24 plug-in registration (plug-in registry) view
2.7.2 plug-in view
The plug-in view is displayed in a tree that lists the extensions and plug-in projects in the current workspace. It provides a shortcut to review existing plug-ins (Figure 2-25 ). In the tree, you can expand each extension plug-in so that you can browse the files under this plug-in directory. Unfortunately, if the plug-in is included in a jar file instead of a directory, these files will not be displayed in this view (bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi? Id = 89143 see Bugzilla No. 89143 ). Double-click a file element to open the file in the editor.
Figure 2-25 plug-in view
2.7.3 plug-in dependency (plug-in dependencies) view
The plug-in dependency view shows a layer of plug-ins that depend on each other. When the view is opened, right-click the view and select focus on ..., Then selectCom. qualityeclipse. favoritesDouble-click an element in the tree to open a configuration editor for the corresponding plug-in.
Figure 2-26 plug-in dependency View
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Fixed Link: http://www.eclipselight.org/eclipse-plugin-tutorial/733/