Posts Tagged ‘Devoxx’

Devoxx 2012 and Licenses Winners!

Wednesday, November 21st, 2012

Thanks to everyone who joined us last week at Devoxx 2012 in Antwerp, Belgium. It was a remarkable event with exciting people and great sessions. It was also a pleasure to see a lot of people from the Java community using IntelliJ IDEA for their presentations. We also had a bit of fun with this poll about people’s favorite IDEs, spontaneously organized in the lobby.

We really appreciate your support and wish you to be able to choose the right IDE for your daily coding.

As you remember, we promised to run the license shuffle when the conference is over. We are happy to name 20 winners, each of whom will get a personal license for any JetBrains product (or its free upgrade) for free.
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Join IntelliJ IDEA Team on Devoxx 2012

Thursday, November 8th, 2012

As many of you know Devoxx 2012 takes place in Antwerpen, Belgium on 12-16th of November. As usual IntelliJ IDEA team joins this one top event on the calendar for Java developers and we’re looking forward to seeing you there.

At our booth you will be able to learn more from our team about IntelliJ IDEA and the upcoming release of IntelliJ IDEA 12. Stop by for a demo or just pleasant conversation! We will also have our famous ‘I see dead code’ T-shirts for our friends.

And as always, you will have a chance to participate in Hackergarten, the hands-on coding session. At this event you will be able to write an open-source plugin for IntelliJ IDEA from scratch together with experts from our team. Last year these were Peter Gromov, Hamlet D’Arcy and Andres Almiray.

See you there next week!

Devoxx follow-up: your IDE can do more!

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011

We’ve received lots of positive feedback at Devoxx 11 last week and met many happy users of IntelliJ IDEA. But to my surprise, many of them don’t know some little productivity features that have been there for quite a while. So, I want to just highlight a couple of them in this post.

Restore layout

You may sometimes find your IDE bloated with numerous tool-windows… but there is a simple way to get rid of them and rollback to pure editor. That is achieved by the following:
1. Configure tool windows in preferred way (e.g. all tool windows are closed);
2. Remember the layout - ‘Main menu | Window | Store Current Layout as Default’;
3. Call ‘Restore Default Layout’ action (mapped to ‘Shift+F12′ by default) when it’s necessary to rollback the UI;

Soft wraps

In essence, this is the ability to show all text even when it is wider than your editor’s viewport. Use-cases: laptops, diff views, split editor, console output etc:

IntelliJ IDEA support soft wraps starting from version 10 but the feature is significantly improved in the upcoming v.11.

Configuring soft wraps:

Soft wraps effect in Diffs view:

JetBrains Contributes to Open Source at Devoxx

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011

[This post is by Hamlet D'Arcy, JetBrains Academy Member. —Eugene Toporov]

Another Devoxx conference has come and gone, and at this Devoxx, JetBrains was more active than ever. As usual we had our vendor booth, but more importantly we participated directly by giving several conference sessions and helping organize the Hackergarten open-source coding event.

The feedback on our sessions was overall positive. Vaclav Pech and Maxim Mazin gave a session on MPS, and Andrey Breslav presented Kotlin. The video of the talks will be available on the Parleys website soon.

One of the funnest parts of Devoxx was the Hackergarten on Monday afternoon. Hackergarten is an open source coding event where conference attendees are guided through making opens source contributions with the help from the project leads themselves. The Hackergarten was organized and lead by JetBrains Academy Member Hamlet D’Arcy, and we sent our Groovy Project Lead Peter Gromov to help. The code we wrote at the event is already available in IntelliJ IDEA 11, so you can already download and use the features in IntelliJ IDEA 11 Beta.

Niels Harremoës and Peter worked on a Groovy intention that inverts an if statement. So if you start with this Groovy code:

if (a) {
  true
} else {
  false
}


You can press Alt+Enter to bring up the “Invert If” intention and transform
the code into:

if (!a) {
  false
} else {
  true
}


This intention has existed on the Java side for a few years, and now the Groovy users can benefit from the same feature.

The other commit made was from Hamlet D’Arcy and Brice Dutheil. They created a Groovy intention that splits one if statement into two. So when you start with a complex if statement like this:

if (a && b) {
  c()
}


Then pressing Alt+Enter brings up the “Split If” intention, which transforms the code into nested if statements:

if (a) {
  if (b) {
    c()
  }
}

The next step is, of course, to provide the opposite transformation which merges two if statements together. Perhaps we can get it done at the next Hackergarten?

Besides these commits, we also worked on improving the ongoing Griffon framework support with Griffon Lead Andres Almiray. IntelliJ IDEA is learning more about source directory conventions and improving the dedicated Griffon view panels. We also had some productive conversations with the JBoss Forge teams about how best to support their project in IntelliJ IDEA.

Besides all the IntelliJ IDEA contributions, there were other teams working hard on their own projects. Peter Ledbrook from VMWare and Søren Glasius updated several Grails plugins, including the CodeNarc one. Java Champion Steve Chin lead a team into several commits on the ScalaFX project, which is a Scala DSL for writing JavaFX code. A whole bunch of JBoss guys came out to work on their projects. And Gradle Lead Hans Dockter was on site to help people through Gradle issues.

Hackergarten was a lot of fun and we look forward to doing it again. It makes for a different type of conference experience, one in which you learn by doing more than by listening to someone else give a presentation. The activities of coding and traditional sessions was a good mix, and the afternoon spent coding gave us a lot of energy for the rest of the conference.

Are you interesting in coming to a Hackergarten? Hamlet organizes one every other month in Basel Switzerland at his company Canoo. There are other sister groups in Prague and Mexico City as well. If you want to have one in your town then contact Hamlet directly. Who knows, maybe your code will be in the next version of IntelliJ IDEA?

Devoxx 2008 Free License Winners Announced

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

The JetBrains team had a wonderful time at Devoxx 2008 in Antwerp, Belgium – from the many interesting presentations, to the huge number of attendees, to the fantastic entertainment – everything was just perfect! Special thanks to Stephan Janssen and the other Devoxx organizers for, once again, putting on such a great event.

If you were there, chances are you stopped by our booth – to demo IntelliJ IDEA 8.0 and TeamCity 4.0 – and entered to win a free IntelliJ IDEA license. We originally thought that we’d giveaway 10-free licenses but, due to the incredible number of entries, we decided to giveaway 20 instead! Thanks to everyone who entered, it was great meeting you all.

And the winners are:

Xavier Cosyns
Andreas Andersson
Austin Moore
Michele Mizzaro
Dongbo Cao
Daadoucha Skander
Rudolf Fluetsch
Gert Pelssers
Mees Witteman
Doug Westcott
Bart Van Bogaert
Peter Lodewyckx
Rajeev Chugh
Serkan Erdur
Leonard Benjamin
Celine Gouttiere
Igor Mihalik
Johnnie Pedersen
Daniel Guillaume
Nils Preusher

Congratulations to the winners, your license keys are on the way, in fact, they should be in your inboxes already!