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Disable the Red Badge Alerts on Dock Icons in Mac OS X Apr 29, 2013 - 1 Comment The little red badges that appear on app icons stored in the Mac OS X Dock are intended to provide a quick alert and overview of some important notification pertaining to the respective app. How to get rid of a stuck unread message badge on OS X Posted on July 16, 2015 by LucaTNT Having our messages (iMessage and SMS) available on our Macs is great, however sometimes we get an unread badge that can’t seem to go away, no matter how hard we look for the unread message, it is just not there 1. Next, drag the workspace folder to the Trash. Go to your Applications folder. One way to get there is, from the Finder, type command-shift-A. You'll a folder named eclipse in there; drag the eclipse folder to the Trash. If you have an Eclipse icon in your dock, remove it from the dock.
Details Group Tabs
- In this handout we will download Eclipse Standard 4.5 for Mac OS X 64 Bit; if your computer uses Mac OS X (Cocoa), continue below; otherwise look for the pull-down list showing Mac OS X (Cocoa) and instead choose either Windows or Linux and then continue below.
- How to Install Eclipse Mac OS In 1.00/1.001/1.002, you will use the Eclipse Integrated Development Environment (IDE) to create, compile, and run Java programming assignments. Eclipse version 3.7.1 is the IDE supported by the 1.00 staff. This document contains step-by-step instructions for installing Eclipse on a Mac OS X computer.
A little utility for macOS that adds a Open Workspace menu entry which when activated opens the selected workspace in a new Eclipse instance. In addition Eclipse instance icons get a badge with the workspace name. This can be set in Preferences > General > Workspace. If unspecified the last segment of the workspace path will be used.
Note that OS X 10.6 or newer is required as this feature relies on the open command's ability to pass on arguments. Eclipse IDE 3.7+ and Java 1.7 or better is also required.
![Eclipse Workspace Dock Badge For Mac Os X Eclipse Workspace Dock Badge For Mac Os X](/uploads/1/1/7/7/117726343/313421834.jpg)
Issues are reported in GitHub and comments go to @torkildr.
- workspace,
- OS X,
2020-06 (4.16), 2020-03 (4.15), 2019-12 (4.14), 2019-09 (4.13), 2019-06 (4.12), 2019-03 (4.11), 2018-12 (4.10), 2018-09 (4.9), Photon (4.8), Oxygen (4.7), Neon (4.6), Mars (4.5), Luna (4.4), Kepler (4.3), Juno (4.2, 3.8), Previous to Juno (<=4.1), 2020-09 (4.17)
Date | Ranking | Installs | Clickthroughs |
---|---|---|---|
December 2020 | 203/854 | 81 (0.05%) | 15 |
November 2020 | 209/925 | 199 (0.04%) | 36 |
October 2020 | 203/927 | 225 (0.05%) | 39 |
September 2020 | 195/894 | 222 (0.05%) | 28 |
August 2020 | 223/867 | 136 (0.04%) | 14 |
July 2020 | 203/870 | 179 (0.04%) | 15 |
June 2020 | 211/867 | 181 (0.04%) | 11 |
May 2020 | 229/876 | 190 (0.04%) | 31 |
April 2020 | 224/891 | 226 (0.04%) | 21 |
March 2020 | 209/892 | 251 (0.05%) | 17 |
February 2020 | 222/885 | 204 (0.04%) | 18 |
January 2020 | 197/871 | 267 (0.05%) | 18 |
Unsuccessful Installs in the last 7 Days: 2
Count | Error Message |
---|---|
1 | Cannot continue the operation. There is another install operation in progress. |
1 | Cannot complete the install because some dependencies are not satisfiable... |
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This page tells you how to download and install Java 7 and Eclipse on Mac OS X, and how to configure Eclipse.
Installing Java 7
- Go to the Oracle website. You'll see something like this:
- Scroll down until you see a heading beginning 'Java SE 7u51.' On the right, you'll see a Download button. Click it. The next screen will look like this:Click the radio button next to 'Accept License Agreement' and then click on jdk-7u51-macosx-x64.dmg. You'll be asked whether to save the file that is going to be downloaded; click on Save File.
- Open your Downloads folder, and double-click on jdk-7u51-macosx-x64.dmg. You'll see this window:
- Double-click on the package icon, and follow the instructions to install. When the installation has completed, click on Done. At this point, you may close up the window and drag jdk-7u51-macosx-x64.dmg to the Trash.
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Installing Eclipse
- If you already have Eclipse installed on your Mac, you need to get rid of it. To do so, first quit Eclipse if you're currently running it. Then, go to your workspace folder (probably in Documents/workspace) and save anything there that you want to keep, because you're about to get rid of this folder. Next, drag the workspace folder to the Trash.Go to your Applications folder. One way to get there is, from the Finder, type command-shift-A. You'll a folder named eclipse in there; drag the eclipse folder to the Trash. If you have an Eclipse icon in your dock, remove it from the dock.
- Now you're ready to download and install the newest version of Eclipse. Go to this website. You'll see a window like this:I've circled the link you should click on. It's the 'Mac OS X 64 Bit' link next to 'Eclipse Standard 4.3.2.'
- You'll see this window:Click on the green download arrow that I've circled. Click on 'Open with Archive Utility (default)' and then click OK. The download might take a few minutes. You should not feel compelled to donate.
- After the download completes, folders should automatically expand. When that's done, you should see a folder named eclipse in your Downloads folder. When you open your Downloads folder, if you see Applications under the Favorites on the left side of the window, you should drag the eclipse folder into Applications. If you don't see Applications, then open a new window for Applications (from the Finder, command-shift-A), and drag the eclipse folder into Applications.
- Open your Applications folder, and then open the eclipse folder. You'll see an item named Eclipse; if you like, drag its icon into the dock so that you'll be able to launch Eclipse easily.
- Launch Eclipse. If you're asked whether you want to open it, of course you do; click Open. You'll see a window like this:It will have your user name rather than mine (thc). Select where you want your workspace to be; I recommend the default of your Documents folder. Click the checkbox for using this location as the default, and then click OK.
- You'll see a window like this:Click on the Workbench arrow in the upper right that I've circled. You shouldn't see this screen again, even if you quit Eclipse and relaunch it.
- You'll get an empty workbench like this:You have now installed Eclipse!
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Configuring Eclipse
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You don't have to configure Eclipse the way I do, but you'll probably avoid some confusion if you do. Here's how.
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- In the Eclipse menu bar, click on the Eclipse menu and then on 'Preferences...'. You'll see a window with two panes. On the left pane is a list of types of things you can configure.
- Click on the triangle to the left of General. Then click on the triangle to the left of Appearance. Then click on 'Colors and Fonts.' You should see a window like this:
- In the window in the middle, click on the triangle next to Java. Then double-click on 'Java Editor Text Font':
- You'll see this window:On the right, where you can select the size, click 12. Then close this window by clicking on the window's close button.
- Close up the General preferences by clicking on the triangle to the left of General. Click the triangle next to Java and then click the triangle next to 'Code Style.' Then click Formatter. Here's what you should see:
- Click the button that says 'New...'. You'll see a window such as this one:You can type in any profile name you like. I used 'CS 10':Click OK.
- You should see a window like this:Change the tab size to 2:You'll see that the indentation size automatically changes as well.
- Click on 'Blank Lines,' and after 'Between import groups' and 'Before declarations of the same kind,' change the values 1 to 0:
- Click on 'Control Statements,' and check the first four boxes as I've done here:Click OK.
- Now click on triangles to close up Java. Click on the triangle next to Run/Debug, and then click on Console:
- Click on the green color sample next to 'Standard In text color.' You'll get a color picker:
- Slide the slider on the right down, so that you get a dark green. (You're at Dartmouth. What other color could you possibly want?)Close the color picker window by clicking its close button, and click OK again to close the Preferences window.
- Finally, I don't use the Outline pane, which is on the right-hand side of the window. Click on the 'X' next to Outline in the tab of this pane; I've circled the 'X':You'll get something like this:And you're done!