If you import this project into Eclipse, it should just work.Try to convert your “Hello, world” projects from the two IDEs into Maven projects. You can view the site in your web browser by opening the file “…/hello/target/site/”.Convert your Maven project to an Eclipse-Maven project: “mvn eclipse:eclipse”. To run this Jar file, enter the command (without changing directories first):java -cp cop2805.AppFinally, there are a couple of other Maven commands to play with:Try “mvn site” to generate a website for your project.
m2 directory there.) Notice the JAR file that is the resulting application. (Also look in your home directory and use tree on the. This is done with the simple command:mvn installRun the tree/F (or tree) command to see the new files created. Maven will automatically put a copy into your local repo, ~/.m2/ (“~” means your home directory.). (Hopefully, a new version of that plugin will address that problem!)Next, compile, test, package, and install your project. To fix, you need to add these four lines in your generated pom.xml: 1.9 1.9 Those lines can go anywhere between the initial tag and the final tag, but not inside of any other tags.
The reason is, the current version of Maven’s compile plugin tries to generate code compatible with Java 5 (“javac -release 5 -source 5”), and Java 9 only supports Java 6 through 9. (When using Maven “for real”, you would edit the POM file and then edit or replace the App.javaand AppTest.java files.)If using Java 9, you will need to add some lines to your pom.xml file. Take a look at the generated source code at src/main/java/cop2805/App.java, the generated unit test atsrc/main/java/cop2805/App.java, and the generated pom.xml file. That’s your personal Maven repo.Next cd into your new hello directory. Also take a look in your home directory you should see a new subdirectory there named. When done, see what files were created by using the tree/F hello command (just tree on Mac or Linux). Next, create a working “Hello, World” project named “hello” using the command (one long line):mvn archetype:generate -DgroupId=cop2805 -DartifactId=hello -DarchetypeArtifactId=maven-archetype-quickstart -DinteractiveMode=falseThat might take a while the first time. Doing this provides you with the brew command to install things.Run the command brew install maven.If your version of OS X doesn’t include the tree command, you can install that using the command brew install tree.First, pick (or create) an empty directory to hold your Maven projects, and cd into it. The simplest way seems to be this:Install Homebrew if you don’t already have that: visit brew.sh, copy the long line shown, and paste it in a terminal window. One is to follow the standard install directions for a Linux-like system, found on the Maven website.
While some programs are smart enough to guess to try default install locations when you don’t set these variables, that won’t work if you don’t install in the default locations.)Install Maven on Mac OS XThere are several ways do to this. All of these may be used by other programs to locate files they need. I suggest C:Java (used in the directions that follow), but anyplace you wish is fine.I suggest you rename the folder from apache-maven-version to something simpler, such as just maven.Add this entry to the PATH environment variable: C:Javamavenbin (use the folder name you picked).Add this new environment variable: M2_HOME=C:JavamavenMake sure you have the following environment variable set: JAVA_HOME=C:java (or whatever location you used for the JDK).(As a reminder: PATH is used by your system to locate executables such as mvn or java CLASSPATH is used by Java to locate packages and some other things JAVA_HOME is used by various programs (including Maven) to locate a JDK and M2_HOME (previously known as MAVEN_HOME) is used by mvn to locate various configuration files.
Be sure to download the binary zip, not the source (“src”) zip!Extract it to someplace.
Install Maven on Windows (See the box below for Mac directions):Download the zip archive of latest version of Maven.