Use the latest IntelliJ release and install the Scala plugin from within the IDE.
To create the IntelliJ project files:
- Run
sbt intellij
- Open
src/intellij/scala.ipr
in IntelliJ - In
File
→Project Structure
→Project
→Project SDK
, create an SDK entry named "1.8" containing the Java 1.8 SDK
The project files are created by as copies of the .SAMPLE
files, which are under version control.
The actual IntelliJ project files are in .gitignore
so that local changes are ignored.
For every module in the IntelliJ project there is a corresponding -deps
library, for exmaple compiler-deps
provides ant.jar
for the compiler codebase.
The .jar
files in these -deps
libraries can be easily kept up-to-date by running sbt intellij
again.
This is necessary whenever the dependencies in the sbt build change, for example when the STARR version is updated.
Note that this command only patches the dependency lists, all other settings in the IntelliJ project definition are unchanged.
To overwrite the project definition files by copying the .SAMPLE
files again run sbt intellijFromSample
.
The 2.12.x branch contains IntelliJ module files for actors
and forkjoin
even though these modules only exist in 2.11.x.
This allows using the same IntelliJ project files when switching to the 2.11.x branch (without causing any issues while working on 2.12.x).
When switching between 2.11.x and 2.12.x, make sure to run sbt intellij
.
Note that the Project SDK
is not updated in this process.
If you want to use the Java 1.6 SDK while working on 2.11.x you need to change it manually (File
→ Project Structure
→ Project
→ Project SDK
).
Compiling, running, JUnit tests and debugging should all work. You can work on the compiler, the standard library, and other components as well.
Note that compilation within IntelliJ is performed in a single pass.
The code is compiled using the "STARR" (stable reference) compiler, as specified by starr.version
in versions.properties
.
This is consistent with the sbt build.
Note that the output directory when compiling in IntelliJ is the same as for the sbt build.
This allows building incrementally in IntelliJ and directly use the changes using the command-line scripts in build/quick/bin/
.
The command intellijToSample
overwrites the .SAMPLE
files using the current project definition files.