Translations:KDevelop5/Manual/Working with source code/19/en: Difference between revisions

From KDE UserBase Wiki
(Importing a new version from external source)
(Importing a new version from external source)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
If you hover your mouse over the symbol for the working set, you get a tooltip that shows you which files are currently open in this working set (here: the <code>step-32.cc</code> and <code>step-1.cc</code> files). Clicking on the red minus sign closes the tab for the corresponding file. Maybe more importantly, clicking on the correspondingly named button allows you to '''close''' the entire working set at once (i.e. to close all currently open files). The point about closing a working set, however, is that it doesn't just close all files, it actually saves the working set and opens a new, still empty one. You can see this here:
If you hover your mouse over the symbol for the working set, you get a tooltip that shows you which files are currently open in this working set (here: the <code>helper.h</code>, <code>helper.cpp</code>, <code>filemanagerlistjob.h</code> and <code>filemanagerlistjob.cpp</code> files). The working set icon can have different colors at different times in it, but they have no specific meaning. Clicking on the square with a minus sign closes the tab for the corresponding file in the working set. The point about closing a working set, however, is that it doesn't just close all files, it actually prompts you to save the file if any are changed but not saved and opens a new, still empty one.

Latest revision as of 08:38, 2 April 2020

Information about message (contribute)
This message has no documentation. If you know where or how this message is used, you can help other translators by adding documentation to this message.
Message definition (KDevelop5/Manual/Working with source code)
If you hover your mouse over the symbol for the working set, you get a tooltip that shows you which files are currently open in this working set (here: the <code>helper.h</code>, <code>helper.cpp</code>, <code>filemanagerlistjob.h</code> and <code>filemanagerlistjob.cpp</code> files). The working set icon can have different colors at different times in it, but they have no specific meaning. Clicking on the square with a minus sign closes the tab for the corresponding file in the working set. The point about closing a working set, however, is that it doesn't just close all files, it actually prompts you to save the file if any are changed but not saved and opens a new, still empty one.

If you hover your mouse over the symbol for the working set, you get a tooltip that shows you which files are currently open in this working set (here: the helper.h, helper.cpp, filemanagerlistjob.h and filemanagerlistjob.cpp files). The working set icon can have different colors at different times in it, but they have no specific meaning. Clicking on the square with a minus sign closes the tab for the corresponding file in the working set. The point about closing a working set, however, is that it doesn't just close all files, it actually prompts you to save the file if any are changed but not saved and opens a new, still empty one.