![]() ![]() It’s still under active development and will be available in early 2020. There will be a new, paid BashSupport Pro plugin that provides advanced support to work with Shell scripts. Generally, bundled Shell Script plugin is enough for basic routine functionality and provides better integration but if you need more advanced features like rename refactoring, documentation lookup, inspections, and … BashSupport will be your choice. bundled Shell Script plugin is not compatible with BashSupport and you could not use BashSupport and bundled Shell Script plugin simultaneously and should disable one of them. If you use IntelliJ IDEA Community Edition like me and want to see dependencies hierarchically of your Maven project and search or find conflicts and cyclic in it, Maven Helper is a very suitable tool for you.īashSupport provides an almost complete development environment to work with Bash scripts but IntelliJ IDEA comes with a bundled plugin for shell scripts (from version 2019.2) which is lighter than BashSupport. Indent Rainbow plugin colors indentations of the codes, this plugin shows you which lines don’t have proper indentation levels in red color and it is very useful. Rainbow Brackets plugin colors the brackets in your code so that you can find matching brackets easily by color. These two plugin helps you to have better control over indentations and brackets in the Java codes. With the rise of the popularity of functional programming and also reactive programming in Java world, you will have several nested blocks, indentations, and brackets in your Java codes. Java programming language uses brackets to define a block of code and there are several nested blocks in a Java program code. In this post, I am going to introduce some useful IntelliJ IDEA plugins which help me in everyday coding: I am used to IntelliJ IDEA Community Edition (free and open-source version) and found it great (and faster) for Java and Scala development. In the past, I used NetBeans IDE (from version 4.5) and had a fun time with it but after start developing using IntelliJ IDEA (about 8 years ago) I could not go back to NetBeans. I am a completely IntelliJ IDEA addicted Java developer. ![]()
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