PhpStorm: any way to change file type dynamically - phpstorm

I failed to find any information on how to change file type dynamically for PhpStorm. For example I need to deal with HTML files, which could have some PHP, Twig markup, embedded JS at the same time.
It is of course possible to choose the type via Preferences -> File Types, but the pattern can be registered for one file type only, and this is a problem.
It is not possible to enable multiple types for a single file, and it is not convenient at all to switch types via settings all the time.

You cannot use "Open as" or change language on the fly.
Please follow these and related tickets (star/vote/comment) to get notified on any progress:
https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-113835
https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-103297 (recently got Priority boosted from "Normal" to "Major")

Related

How to attach a project without mixing class declarations in PhpStorm?

I like PhpStorm's ability to attach multiple projects to the current window:
I've noticed, however, that all classes declared in both projects are available in both projects, which can lead to duplicate declarations:
I understand how this can be useful at times, however I'd like to attach projects just to navigate easily between them (I prefer this to switching windows), while keeping them separate as if they were in separate windows.
Is this possible?
Currently IDE does not have "scoped indexing" that may be able to resolve this. Right now you would need to exclude such duplicate files or tell IDE to not to treat them as PHP so they do not get indexed as such.
Your current options:
Use Mark Directory As | Excluded via context menu in Project View panel (or manually via Settings (Preferences on macOS) | Directories) for a folder(s) from additional project.
Mark individual files as Plain Text via context menu in Project View panel. The downside: such "marking" is IDE-wide as far as I know, so the same file path will be excluded in another project as well.
Any other exclusion mechanic that is currently available (e.g. Settings (Preferences on macOS) | Editor | File Types | Ignore files and folders -- global as well and based on file name only and file will be completely ignored from all operations... so not really acceptable for your case).
Consider watching after https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/WI-17646 (star/vote/comment) and related tickets to get notified on any progress.
If they are the same classes, have you thought about making a composer package for them? Would be easier to manage it all I think.

PhpStorm: how to apply external tool (jpegoptim) on many files?

I am using jpegoptim in PhpStorm as external tool.
Works fine when I do select 1 file.
How can I apply that on many JPEG files ?
That's not possible at the moment (not supported).
https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-90239
https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-97869
Watch these tickets (star/vote/comment) to get notified on any progress.
If you definitely need it in one go (and not calling that External Tools entry once for each file)... then what you may try is:
Select desired files
Use Copy Paths from context menu
Call another External Tools entry that:
Uses $ClipboardContent$ macro
It's some shell/batch script that parses such parameter (splits into separate lines to get individual paths) and then calls actual program in cycle -- once for each file from the parsed parameter.
A bit too complicated as for my liking... Plus, I've not tried it myself so not sure how line ending symbols will be passed here (so it can be parsed in the script).
BTW -- you can assign custom shortcut to particular External Tools entry so you may call it for each file individually -- it will be faster with shortcut than doing the same with the mouse.

Changing a value in a .config file based on a user's selection in an InstallShield 2013 install

Sorry - I'm a total newbie with InstallShield. I've inherited an InstallShield 2013 project that presents the user with a dialog that let's the user select a SQL Server and based on their selection sets a value in a config file. That's not working, so I opened the project in IS and looked in the Text File Changes under System Configuration and there's nothing there that would do this. So how do I figure out where this is happening (or not happening in my case), and then how do I get it to work? I need to set both data source and initial catalog in a file called server.config.
So how do I determine what the user selected and then save that in this file? It looks like I can set up a Text File Change, but how do I access the values selected by the user? And how can I figure out where the "code" is that is supposed to be doing this?
Thanks,
Ben
I would try to track this from the dialog and controls in question, or by following the value through a verbose log. Since you say it doesn't work today, there will probably be an interruption in the flow I describe below, and since you don't know the full state of the installation project, it may be hard to identify. So search from what you know.
Top down: what gets configured
First, find the dialog that you fill out as a user making the selection. Then figure out the property that the particular control is associated with. Now you've got a thread; pull on it.
Search in the direct editor for references to the property. If the property is named MYCONFIG search for just that: MYCONFIG. You'll probably find some sort of use that looks like [MYCONFIG] instead, which is typically a format string specifying to use the value of MYCONFIG. You may also have to search all the files related to your project, as Custom Action implementations can be code stored outside of your InstallShield project.
The use may be in a ControlEvent, CustomAction, or some other table. If it's in a ControlEvent, it may be used to set another property. Ditto if it's in a CustomAction that sets properties (type 51) which may be easier to understand in the Custom Actions and Sequences view. In that case, also search for the property that gets set.
If you find it in a table like ISSearchReplace* or ISXml*, or IniFile, it's probably part of the Text Files Changes, XML File Changes, or INI File Changes, and that view should make it easier to understand.
Maybe that thread dead-ends somewhere. A property gets set, but never referenced. So try to search from the other end.
Bottom up: what gets written
If there are text file changes, xml file changes, ini file changes, or custom actions that reference the file you need updated, see where they get their information. Try to follow it back. If they're well written, you should be able to identify the property (noting that one called CustomActionData comes from a property matching the name of the custom action it's used in), and then trace that further back using the same ideas as above, but in the other direction.
Where's the problem?
If the threads don't connect, that's probably the problem. It's also possible that a custom action lacks permissions but doesn't reports a failure, or that the file name or path got misconfigured somewhere along the way. Look for small things like that if things look like they should work but don't.
It turns out that I misunderstood the problem and the project was never set up to change that value, so all I had to do was set up a Text File Change and it works perfectly. Thanks #Michael Urman for the thorough response - I really appreciate it!

Can I add some public meta data to an encrypted Access 2010 database?

My application stores its data in an Access 2010 database (accdb) file. It's password protected, which means it's encrypted w/ AES-128.
I'd like to add some meta data to the file that's publically available. This way older verisons of my application can investigate the file to see if it's even worth trying to open. Otherwise, they'll just get the dreaded "Unrecognized Database Format" error, which is usually associated with file corruptions.
In Windows, you can right-click on a file, click "Properties" and see attributes under the Details tab. I'd love it if I add attributes like the version of my application that last touched the file, and maybe other details. I'd like to avoid having a different file extension for each version of my app!
Is it possible to add some public meta data to an encrypted Access 2010 database?
You can add custom database properties : http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;q178745
You can change the file extension of an encrypted Access database and change the properties for that extension. The extension .enc is fairly descriptive and does not seem to be widely used.
The file will open normally when clicked and ask for the password. The icon will be recognizably Access and the description, "Encrypted MS Access" in this case, will appear under Type in a directory listing.
With NTFS, you can add an alternate data stream (ADS):
notepad.exe z:\docs\testde.enc:Extra.txt
Reading the stream:
more < testde.enc:extra.txt
More information: http://www.think-techie.com/2010/04/alternate-data-streams.html
http://www.irongeek.com/i.php?page=security/altds
This is a tough nut to crack! An application must read information about the ACCDB, but that information can't be stored in the ACCDB because you want the read without opening the ACCDB. And you can't use the suggested file system methods because this must work under Wine on Mac (I assume from another of your questions).
The only solution I can see is to create a companion file (with same base name but different extension) to hold the metadata. So if your application wants to know about SomeDb.accdb, it would look for a file named SomeDb.metadata and read that instead.
I suggested a kludge for your earlier question ... unfortunately this is another. :-) However, it's a simple kludge and it should work ... even on Mac.

How can I disable "HTML Checking" in NetBeans?

I'm using NetBean's Compile on Save setting, and it's really handy when I'm editing a single file. But when I'm dealing with a pair of (or more) class files and am switching between the files, I have a problem:
The Task tab is nearly worthless since it is littered by HTML "error" messages(+) from many dozens of HTML files in the project that are generated by some external tool. The number of HTML errors swamps out any actual Java errors.
What I want is one of:
A way to tell NB to ignore the directory with the HTML files ("help").
A way to turn off HTML "errors" or even to specify HTML2.
A way to filter "Task" errors by file type, parent folder: all Java is under "com".
I've perused the settings and properties, but found nothing that helps.
<rant> Yet another reason I hate an IDE that use the "Take Everything in the Folder" approach.... </rant>
+ = The files are valid HTML but probably not XHTML. Plus, half the messages end abruptly, with something like: "Unexpected tag <TD> found, expecting one of
I found the answer, or at least one that works for me (NB 6.8, YMMV):
In the Tasks tab, click the filter button in the left,
Choose Edit...
In the Task List Filter dialog:
Click New
Enter a value for Name (such as "No Script Messages"),
Uncheck the Scripting Language Tasks option
Click OK.
If the filter doesn't work immediately, you may wish to close/open the Task window or Netbeans.
Hope that helps someone else.
You can go to Tools->options->Editor->Hint .
You can easily select the right options from there .
I want to use task list to only track my To Do list and It can be a real pain when Netbeans starts showing me #todos from included libraries and all sort of compile errors that I am not interested in. If your use case is like me (not interested in compile errors etc. in task window) then you can do following:- (Netbeans 7.1.2)
1) Tasks window | Right click filter | Edit
To edit the default filter.
Click default filter in left hand panel.
Right hand panel, under Type tab - un-check compile errors and issues
2) You can go to Tools | Options | Miscellaneous
Go to Tasks tab now.
Here you can add/remove the To Do strings that you want.
You can create your own custom todo string or make sure that only one of them is listed (what you use)
Now apply default filter and you will only see your #todo tasks. sane and sweet :D