Qt creating new translation (ts) using Visual gives error - (ExitCode 1) - visual-studio-2010

I am using QTranslator in VS 2010. When using the process below I get an error saying the add-on has exited with an error (Exitcode 1). I have been through the whole process (code to executable with translations working) using Qt Linguist and Qt Creator. However, I cannot even create the ts file in Visual Studio (add on menus all where they should be). Anyone any ideas why please?
Creating Qt Translation Files for the Project
To add a new translation file to the project, select Qt|Create New Translation File. In the Add Translation dialog, you can choose the language to create a translation file. A suggested file name is provided, and will be created when you click OK. The translation file is placed in the Translation Files folder in Visual Studio's Solution Explorer. Right-clicking on a translation file displays a menu that allows you to invoke lupdate, lrelease, and Qt Linguist.

With the qt add-in version 1.1.11, I experienced a similar error. I made a translation (VS 2010 File Menu > Qt > Create New Translation) and sometime later when I did a build after having two translations in place it gave the error ExitCode 1 for the Qt Add in.
After just clicking Ok on this error dialog for a few days each time I built, I found that listed in the output, there is a combo box for the source of the output.
Change this combo box from "Debug" to "Qt Visual Studio Add-in", and then you should see the source of the error in the output. For me, one of the ts files had a line that couldn't be parsed. I deleted that ts file and created a new one, and the error went away.
Hope that helps.

Related

how to get color code on my code FOR EXAMPLE (Debug.Log) to be in a color?

s
I want someone to tell me how to put colors on the code so its easier for me to code.
I think you forgot to select unity c# components when installing visual studio,
try again with visual code
If you are talking about Intellisense / syntax highlighting, you need to make sure that you installed Visual Studio Tools for Unity (Note this is needed for Visual Studio only and you may already have it installed).
Then follow these steps:
Close Visual Studio
In Unity, go to Edit > Preferences > External Tools
Click on the External Script Editor dropdown (this should be on which ever Visual Studio editor you are using or any other supported editor).
Make sure Embedded packages and Local Packages is checked under Generate csproj files for:
Click on Regenerate project files
Open any C# script and check if syntax highlighting is working.
In the worst case, if that does not work, you can close Unity and delete everything except the Assets/ and Project Settings/ folders (as well as anything you explicitly added) in your project's root directory. Unity will regenerate the project folders and files again when you open the project in the editor. It may just be that some of your project files were corrupt.
Also, in case I misinterpreted your question and you are talking about coloring the output in the console window within the editor, you can try using rich text which I believe is supported by Unity's console window in the latest versions.
Example:
Debug.Log("<color=red>this is red text</color>");
For more info on that:
https://docs.unity3d.com/Packages/com.unity.ugui#1.0/manual/StyledText.html

Make Visual Studio Code open files in the already open project window?

I build my project on the terminal using make. When I encounter some compile errors, the output indicates in which files there is an error. I can Ctrl-click the file names to open them (a feature of iTerm). However, this makes Visual Studio Code open a new window with that single file, instead of navigating to that file in the already open project window. Is there a way to change this?
There is an option window.openFilesInNewWindow, but that only works for files opened within VS Code, not from Finder or other apps.
VSCode accepts -r or --reuse-window as a parameter to force opening a file in the active project window.
If you can configure your iTerm feature and add this parameter, it should work as expected.
Reference : https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/editor/codebasics

C/C++ file properties not showing in VS2010

Got this strange Visual Studio's behavior: when I open properties pages for C/C++ files, the C/C++ properties do not show.
The short description seems similar to 'Properties page not displaying in Visual Studio 2008', but it is actually quite different – the pages display as they should, also a tree of properties' categories are shown, and even the General properties display when clicked (Excluded From Build: No; Item Type: C/C++ compiler), but the whole C/C++ category tree shows no properties, and even no properties grid:
link to a full-resolution image
When I click the project, C/C++ properties are shown as usual, together with Linker properties and all other groups:
link to a full-resolution image
I tried to refresh the installation with setup.exe from the original installation disk, but that didn't help. Then I uninstalled the IDE and re-installed it back. Tried devenv /setup reconfiguration command, too.
Now I have no idea what I should check/fix next.
Forgot to specify OS: VS2010 + SP1, Win 7 Ultimate + SP1, 64 bit.
Is something else also selected along with C++ file in Visual Studio ?
Typically Visual Studio will show a Property page empty if objects from multiple selection does not have common properties. e.g. if you select a c++ file and solution at the top, a blank property page would appear.

MS Visual Studio.net - saved source files missing after reboot

The other day I created a MS visual studio 2010 C# project and started coding. I saved the source frequently, but I did not select a destination to save to (just pressed ctrl+s and assumed the source was being saved). However I had to run and threw my laptop in my backpack on sleep. Unfortunately this laptop (acer aspire 5252 fyi) battery drains extremely quickly when on sleep, and eventually my computer shut off. Now I can't find my source files anywhere and I'm going crazy because I know I saved it and it's several days worth of work.
I tried doing a windows search but couldn't find the project files. I also did a little experiment - I created a new project and without saving the entire solution, I pressed ctrl+s on the source files. Save was successful, but I cannot even find the file that's open in the IDE. Even the "open containing folder option" is grayed out (see screen shot).
I really need these source files back. Obviously it's because I didn't save the solution that the source got wiped out, but where do the source files get saved temporarily before the solution is saved?
Thanks.
You are using Visual Studio's support for temporary projects. Nice feature for quicky test projects (and SO answers) but not a great way to ensure that your projects are still there after VS quits. Programming without source control is similarly inadvisable.
Tools + Options, Projects and Solutions, General. Ensure that the "Save new projects when created" option is ticked to minimize the odds that you'll forget to pick a solution folder. Triple-check that creating a new project now gives you a "Location" property in the dialog.
There is a default location for projects to be saved. That is probably where your files went.
In Visual Studio, on the menu, click Tools > Options > Projects and Solutions > General. There is a "Visual Studio projects location".
On my Windows 7 machine, the folder for Visual Studio 2010 is
C:\Users\<username>\Documents\Visual Studio 2010\Projects
Your unnamed project is probably saved with a default name like WebSite1.
If you would like to change that default location, here is some information on how to do that.
Visual Studio temporary projects are normally found in *C:\Users\"User Name"\AppData\Local\Temporary Projects* . It is a temporary folder that is deleted as soon as Visual Studio starts up.
How to save a Temporay Project from above link:
To save a temporary project
In Solution Explorer, choose the solution or project that you want to save.
On the menu bar, choose File, Save or Save As.
The Save Project dialog box opens.
In the , Name box, specify a name for the project.
In the Location box, specify where you want to save the project.
Select the Create directory for Solution check box.
Note: This check box is not available for Visual Basic web projects, Visual C# web projects, or other directory-based projects.
In the New Solution Name box, specify a name that differs from the project name.
Select the Add to Source Control check box if you want to add the solution to a version-control database or repository.
Choose the OK button.

How to add a new file association to Visual Studio?

(Windows XP, Visual Studio 2010 Express (Web Developer))
I would like to add various file types to open in Visual Studio that it does not open by default, namely .js, .html, .shtml, .css, etc.
I tried looking for UI inside Visual Studio to add new file types, but I couldn't find anything, so I tried the naive approach of right clicking on the file -> Open With -> Choose Program -> Browse -> c:\program files\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\Common7\IDE\VWDExpress.exe. This almost works, except it starts a new instance of the IDE rather than opening a new tab the way .cs files do.
I've tried to go registry diving, exported the association for .cs files, and changing it to point to .shtml (for example), but this still spawns new windows.
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.shtml]
"Content Type"="text/plain"
"PerceivedType"="text"
#="VWDExpress.cs.10.0"
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.shtml\OpenWithProgids]
"VSTA.cs.9.0"=""
"VWDExpress.cs.9.0"=""
"VWDExpress.cs.10.0"=""
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.shtml\OpenWithProgids\Shared]
#="Shared key to keep this from being removed with install/uninstall of side-by-side components."
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.shtml\PersistentHandler]
#="{5e941d80-bf96-11cd-b579-08002b30bfeb}"
I strongly suspect that doing this is the wrong way to go about this, but I can't find a better solution. Is there one?
Ive had the same issue so downloaded VWD with SP1 along with VS.PHP 2.10. Right clicked on a .php file and chose 'open with vs.php 2.10', checked the checkbox on bottom which saves settings. Double clicking on a php file has been working since then. In order to be able to use it from a file manager like winscp i had to put 'explorer' as the editor executable. It works for my js html css and php files and opens them in the same VWD instance. Only pain may be that vs.php is to be paid for eventually and that you'd need to associate every extension you wish to work with.
After you use naive approach to associate file with VWDExpress.exe, find a command in registry and add /EDIT parameter. I don't know if this works for Express versions, but for full Visual Studio this opens file in already open Visual Studio instance.
Download Default Programs Editor and open.
In my case I was associating .php files to Visual Studio 11, and to do this I simply copied the settings for .cs files. I've noted all steps below.
FIle Type Settings > Context Menu
Search .php (or whatever association) - note you can multi-select
Click next
Click Add... under the list
Enter the following data:
Command name: Open
Program path: C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 11.0\Common7\IDE\devenv.exe" /dde
Now unfold the Advanced Settings, tick Use DDE Message, and click Edit. Add the following:
Message: Open("%1")
Application: VisualStudio.11.0
Topic: system
If you want to apply this to lots of files I suggest using the built in saving to registry option and creating a batch script with it.

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