I'm trying to set up Eclipse 3.2.2 on my laptop. The first problem I hit is that the locations available for saving extensions are all in root territory, /usr/share and /usr/lib. So of course as a non-root user I can't write to them. Is there a location for local storage of extensions? No, that would be too easy. OK, I can add to the list of extension locations. I click on that, and get a list of directories in my home directory. No .directories show, e.g. .eclipse, etc. Great. I get around this by typing in ".eclipse". Hitting return produces an error message, but at least now I can return to the file picker and I'm in the .eclipse directory. Are we having fun yet? I found out later by accident that if you right click in the picker window, you can turn on "show hidden files". Another intuitive and obvious GUI feature. There is a description of what Eclipse is looking for in the file picker. OK, if the people who wrote the file picker know what they need, why can't the user pick a convenient spot and have Eclipse build the directory structure? Did someone say, "User friendly"? So I built the whole tree by hand, selected it, and Eclipse insisted on restarting. Someone please tell the developers that this is not Windows. I then started looking for extensions. Again. For each repository, Eclipse wants to know, again, my preferred mirror. Is there any reason Eclipse can't salt that information away in a properties file? OK, it's capable of figuring out and selecting dependencies. I suppose I should be thankful for that. I then accept the licenses, having, as we all do, read every single one. I then hit "next" ("finish" is there but grayed out). Nothing happens. Nada, zip. I can hit the "next" button all I want, and nothing happens. On the theory that the cute little question mark hieroglyph in the lower left hand corner of the dialog box might give me some help, I click on that. Again, nothing. The program isn't locked up, it's just on strike or something. Maybe after all that I should be glad the "Cancel" button worked. Is everything in Eclipse this brain-damaged user hostile? Is this a test designed to limit Eclipse users to uber-geeks? -- Charles Curley /"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign Looking for fine software \ / Respect for open standards and/or writing? X No HTML/RTF in email http://www.charlescurley.com / \ No M$ Word docs in email Key fingerprint = CE5C 6645 A45A 64E4 94C0 809C FFF6 4C48 4ECD DFDB
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