Programming Tools Eclipse JUnit Testing make and ant
Spring 2010CS 2252 Development Environments Command line –gvim/emacs –javac –java Integrated Development Environment –provides access to all the tools from a single interface –Eclipse (3.3.2)
Spring 2010CS 2253 Eclipse "universal tool platform" Developed by IBM –Now an open source project Primarily a development environment for Java –written in Java –Extendible Plug-ins can be added to support new functionality and other languages
Spring 2010CS 2254 Eclipse Workbench Provides the basic graphical interface Divided up into views –Navigator shows all projects –Editor has panes for all open files Views are organized into perspectives –a perspective contains a set of views that are needed for a particular task Java perspective debug perspective
Spring 2010CS 2255 Command Line Arguments in Eclipse To use command-line arguments, you need to create a Run Configuration for the project. From the Run menu (or the Run drop-down), select Open Run Dialog Create a new Run Configuration (or modify an existing on for the project) –Click the Arguments tab –Type the desired command-line arguments into the Program Arguments text box –Click Apply and then Run
Spring 2010CS 2256 IO Redirection in Eclipse Append the redirection operators to the command-line arguments Create a script to use as an external tool
Spring 2010CS 2257 JUnit Testing JUnit is an open-source testing framework for Java –facilitates the writing of test cases You can create test cases and test suites by extending the appropriate class from the JUnit package
Spring 2010CS 2258 JUnit Testing JUnit has been integrated into Eclipse Make sure junit.jar is on the build path –use the Properties menu –or let Eclipse find it when you create the test case Create a test case –File -> New -> JUnit Test Case Run your application as a JUnit Test
Spring 2010CS 2259 In the TestCase class Write methods that test each of the methods of your class –use the assertion methods on next slide for testing results of methods You can override setup() and teardown() to create a set of objects to be shared by several tests
Spring 2010CS Assertion methods assertEquals( expected, actual) for primitives assertFalse( condition), assertTrue(condition) assertNull( object), assertNotNull( object) assertSame( ecpected, actual), assertNotSame(expected, actual)
Spring 2010CS Sources of Information The home page for JUnit is at The documentation is at
Spring 2010CS Debugging Compile time –Compiler forces your code to have correct syntax Run time –How do you figure out what is wrong with a program that isn't running correctly? –What information do you need?
Spring 2010CS Debuggers A debugger is a tool that is designed to help you figure out what is going wrong in a program. Useful functionality –Start the program and have it stop just before where you think the error occurs –Look at (and modify) variable values –Look at the call stack –Step through parts of the program one line at a time
Spring 2010CS Debugging in Eclipse The debug perspective provides the views needed for debugging. –Debug view –Variable View –Breakpoints view –Expressions view –Editor view –Outline and Console views are the same as in the java perspective
Spring 2010CS Debug View Shows stack frames for any programs currently being debugged Buttons allow you to –Resume - start from current instruction and continue to next breakpoint or end of program –Suspend (e.g. for infinite loop) –Terminate stops the program –Remove all terminated launches
Spring 2010CS Editor View Essentially the same as in the Java perspective Breakpoints are marked at the edge of the frame –Left click and select toggle breakpoint An arrow marks the next statement to execute Hovering mouse over a variable name will show its value
Spring 2010CS Breakpoints A breakpoint is used to mark lines of code where you want the program to stop. –Once the program stops, you can examine all the variables Breakpoint view shows all breakpoints and allows you to manage them –Disable, enable, remove, remove all
Spring 2010CS Other kinds of Breakpoints Watchpoints - suspend when the program is going to change an instance variable –Run-> Add/Remove Watchpoint Method breakpoints - suspend on entry to or exit from a method –Run-> Add/Remove Method Breakpoint Exception breakpoints - suspend on a particular Exception –Run-> Add/Remove Exception Breakpoint
Spring 2010CS More on Breakpoints You can set breakpoints with hit counts –program stops when the breakpoint has been reached the specified number of times –Right-click on the breakpoint in the breakpoint view You can also set a breakpoint to trigger –when a variable changes –when a Boolean expression is true
Spring 2010CS Stepping through code Step into goes into the code of a method that is being called Step over executes the entire method call Step return completes the current method call –Stops at breakpoints or at the point from which the method was called
Spring 2010CS Values and Expressions Double clicking on a variable in the Variable view allows you to change its value –new value is used when the program resumes Type an expression into the Expression view to find out what its value is
Spring 2010CS UML Diagrams Class diagrams Object diagrams Tools –dia –umbrello –violet
Spring 2010CS UML Class Diagrams Used to illustrate relationships between classes Used to show the details of a particular class
Spring 2010CS UML Symbols SymbolVisibility +public -private #protected ~package RelationshipConnector inheritance (is-a) open arrow association (uses) solid line aggregation/ composition (has-a) open/ solid diamond inner classcircle with cross
Spring 2010CS Inheritance
Spring 2010CS Class Hierarchy
Fall 2007CS UML Class Diagram
Fall 2007CS UML Object Diagram Used to represent the state of the program at some particular time
Spring 2010CS Tools for UML Diagrams dia umbrello violet Eclipse plug-in
Spring 2010CS Building Big Projects For very large projects, the process of recompiling all the modules that make up the project can take a long time. One way to reduce the amount of time needed to build a project is to only recompile the modules that have not changed and don't use modules that have changed. Two tools that determine what needs to be recompiled. –make –ant (for Java)
Spring 2010CS The make Utility make is a command generator designed to help you manage large projects –make allows you to specify dependencies between modules if a class depends on another class, it should be recompiled when that class changes –make allows you to specify how to compile a particular class –make uses these specifications to determine the minimum amount of work needed to recompile a program
Spring 2010CS How does make Work? make uses a file called Makefile (or makefile or GNUMakefile) to determine what needs to be recompiled. The makefile contains a set of rules for executing the jobs it can be asked to do. When you run make, it uses the rules in the makefile to determine what needs to be done. make does the minimum amount of work needed to get the job done.
Spring 2010CS The Makefile A make file consists of a set of rules Each rule has the form target: dependencies commands target is (usually) the name of a file to be created dependencies are the names of files that are needed to create the target commands is one or more commands that need to be executed to create the target. Each command is indented with a tab
Spring 2010CS Example TestPriorityQueue uses KWPriorityQueue. PrintDocument and ComparePrintDocuments objects ComparePrintDocuments uses PrintDocument objects KWPriorityQueue implements Queue
Spring 2010CS makefile TestPriorityQueue.class: TestPriorityQueue.java \ KWPriorityQueue.class PrintDocument.class \ ComparePrintDocuments.class javac TestPriorityQueue.java KWPriorityQueue.class: KWPriorityQueue.java Queue.class javac KWPriorityQueue.java Queue.class: Queue.java javac Queue.java
Spring 2010CS makefile (cont.) ComparePrintDocuments.class: \ ComparePrintDocuments.java PrintDocument.class javac ComparePrintDocuments.java PrintDocument.class: PrintDocument.java javac PrintDocument.java
Spring 2010CS Dummy targets The makefile can also have targets that don’t create files A target to run a java program TestPriorityQueue: TestPriorityQueue.class java TestPriorityQueue A target to remove class files clean: rm -f *.class
Spring 2010CS Sources of Information Managing Projects with make by Andrew Oram and Steve Talbot make_toc.htmlhttp:// make_toc.html Look at the man page man make
Spring 2010CS Ant make can be used with Java files ant was designed for building large Java projects –acronym for "Another Neat Tool" Ant uses XML format for build files
Spring 2010CS build files A build file is an xml file that contains exactly one project element main is target to build if none is given name and basedir are optional attributes for project
Spring 2010CS Targets A project element contains one or more targets Each target corresponds to a task –the main target is required depends attribute contains list of targets that this target needs
Spring 2010CS Tasks Each target contains one or more tasks There are a number of built-in tasks –java needs the classname attribute to be set to the main class –javac –jar - to create a java archive –javadoc - to create the documentation
Spring 2010CS Sources of Information Ant The Definitive Guide by Steve Holzner Ant is an open source Apache project –