< Day Day Up > |
Recipe 2.1 Showing/Hiding Views2.1.1 ProblemWhere did the Console view go? It was here a minute ago. 2.1.2 SolutionTo show a view, select Window Show View, and choose the view you want to show. If the view you want isn't visible, select Window Show View Other, and choose a view from the dialog box that Eclipse presents of all views it knows about. To close a view, click the X button in its tab. 2.1.3 DiscussionIt's easy to close a view accidentally or to work in a perspective that doesn't display a favorite view, such as the Console view that displays text sent to the output console. Just open the view by selecting Window Show View. For example, to add the Navigator view to the Debug perspective, open the Debug view (covered in Chapter 5) by selecting Window Open Perspective Debug. Then add the Navigator view by selecting Window Show View Other Basic Navigator.
Some perspectives try to stack too many views on top of each other, which can make scrolling to the right tab annoying. Now that you know you can open views again as needed, you should have no qualms about closing extra views to remove clutter. 2.1.4 See AlsoRecipe 5.3 on starting a debugging session; Chapter 1 of Eclipse (O'Reilly). |
< Day Day Up > |