To me, reading long camel cased words can sometimes be a bit frustrating. For example:
aReallyLongCamelCasedMethodNameWhichIsTooSelfDescribing
Now, look at this version:
a_Really_Long_Camel_Cased_Method_Name_Which_Is_Too_Self_Describing
Which version is easier on your eyes? The second one is for mine.
开发者_StackOverflow中文版While using Emacs, I stumbled upon a nice minor mode called glasses mode.
Since I'm working primarily with Java, I'm an Eclipse user and I wonder if there is some way to display camel cased words with underscores?
Note that I'm not asking for a way to actually convert camel cased words as described, I'm just looking for a mechanism that works like Emacs' glasses mode in Eclipse.
A regexp to actually do the conversion can be found by googling "Convert camelCase to underscores".
Have you considered using Emacs as your Java IDE? I really like Eclipse and the move sounds painful to me too. However, I bump into more and more people that are actually doing it. Just type "emacs ide java" into google.
It's definitely not a move for everyone, but if you know Emacs fairly well it might be a better option than trying to convert emacs features into Eclipse.
If you can't find any existing Eclipse plugins, then I would consider writing your own editor extension.
If you haven't laid down your mouse and gone into retirement yet, there are now 2 solutions to this:
- use emacs within Eclipse with the emacs+ plugin although I haven't established that you can use a
.emacs
init file to pre-program much of the cool emacs stuff emacs can do like your requirement - convert camel-case to underscored separated using the AnyEdit plug-in and then hit CTRL+z to go back
try to keep your method names descriptive "and" short. If you have really such method names, i would think about it twice before i code it and maybe it is better to use refactoring "extract method" to tile the functionallity, which you can not describe shortly, into more than one method for a better design ;-) "increasing cohesion"
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