Home > Online Product Documentation > Table of Contents > Working with Projects
A
project in Stylus Studio is a group of files related to a given XML application. A project might include XML, XML Schema, and XQuery files, as well as OASIS catalogs, for example. A project can contain subprojects, and subprojects can contain subprojects. The Stylus Studio project framework allows you to name projects (project files are saved with a
.prj extension), and it provides several tools for managing the projects you create.
Projects are simply a convenience for organizing files - a file does not have to belong to a project in order for you to edit it in Stylus Studio. For example, Stylus Studio includes all sample application files in the
examples project. You can find the
examples.prj file in the examples directory of your Stylus Studio installation directory.
This section discusses the following topics:
When you open Stylus Studio for the first time, Stylus Studio displays the
Project window with the
examples project.
There are several ways to toggle the display of the Project window. You might want to do this in order to gain more space in whatever editors you are working with.
Click the X in the upper right corner of the Project window.
You can control whether the Project window displays absolute or relative path names for files in projects. The default display is relative names.
Stylus Studio displays documents that are not associated with a project in the Other Documents folder, which appears after the last folder or document in the currently displayed project. In addition, when you remove a file from a project, it is placed in the Other Documents folder.
You can add these documents to a project at any time. See Adding Files to Projects.
You can create projects and organize any project into multiple levels of subprojects. You can add files to projects and save the project under a name you specify.
Stylus Studio displays the new project in the Project window. The Project window displays information for only one project at a time.
Stylus Studio displays a default subproject folder name (
NewFolder1, for example).
There are several ways to add files to your projects and subprojects. See Adding Files to Projects.
The first time you save a project, Stylus Studio prompts you to specify a name for your project. Stylus Studio appends
.prj to the name you specify. It does not matter whether or not you specify the
.prj extension. Stylus Studio does not allow a project to have any other file name extension.
When you save a project, references to the files part of the project are saved relative to the path of the project file. This allows you to move or share projects easily.
You can have only one project open at one time. If you have a project open and you open a second project, Stylus Studio closes the first project and then opens the second project.
If the Project window is not visible when you open a project, Stylus Studio automatically displays the Project window.
examples.prj in the
examples directory of your Stylus Studio installation directory. The
examples project contains the files for all Stylus Studio sample applications.
Projects that were recently opened are displayed at the bottom of the Project drop-down menu. Click the project you want to open.
You can create an association between Stylus Studio and project files, which always have the
.prj extension. This allows you to double click a
.prj file in Windows Explorer, for example, and have Stylus Studio automatically open and load the project.
Stylus Studio opens the Options dialog box.
You can add any type of file to a project, as long as the file extension is known to Stylus Studio. You can specify file extension-Stylus Studio editor associations on the File Types page of the Options dialog box ( Tools > Options).
Procedures for adding a file to a project vary based on whether or not the file is already open in Stylus Studio.
Alternative: Select Project > Add Document from the Stylus Studio menu bar.
Alternative: Select Project > Add File from the Stylus Studio menu bar.
The Open dialog box appears.
The Save As dialog box appears.
The order in which files are displayed in the Project window has no effect on the project. You might want to place related files near each other, or place more frequently used project files toward the top of the project tree.
When you remove a file from a project, it is added to the Other Documents folder in the Project window.
Alternative: Press the Delete key.
Stylus Studio supports the Microsoft Source Code Control Interface, allowing you to use Stylus Studio with any source code control system that supports the same interface used by Microsoft Visual Studio or Microsoft Visual Studio .NET.
Stylus Studio's source control support allows you to
This section covers the following topics:
Integration with the following source control applications has been tested:
To use Stylus Studio's source control features, you must have already installed the client software for your source control application, as shown in Table 3.
|
When Data Is In
|
You Need to Install
|
|---|---|
|
SourceSafe repository
|
SourceSafe client or SourceOffSite
|
|
ClearCase
|
Attache client
|
|
CVS
|
Zeus-CVS product
|
In addition, files must belong to a Stylus Studio project before you can use them with a source control application.
When you build a project using files from a source control application, Stylus Studio gives you the option of recursively importing all projects that are subordinate to the project folder you select. This option, Recursively import all subprojects, appears on the Build Project from SCC dialog box, which appears when you start the New Project Wizard.
Selecting the
Recursively import all subprojects option has the effect of selecting all the siblings of the selected file or directory, as well as any descendants of the selected item and its siblings. Stylus Studio creates a project that contains all files that Stylus Studio can open (for example,
.xml,
xslt, and
.xsd files) and that are in the directory hierarchy of the file or directory you select.
For example, suppose you check
Recursively import all subprojects, and you select
c:\work\myproject\documentation.xml. Stylus Studio creates a project that contains all Stylus Studio-editable files in
c:\work\myproject and its subdirectories.
If you do not check Recursively import all subprojects, only the file you select is added to the new Stylus Studio project you create. You cannot select a directory if you do not select this option.
The Project Wizards dialog box appears.
The Build Project From SCC dialog box appears.
Depending on your installation, you might need to specify other properties. See Specifying Advanced Source Control Properties.
The Browse for Folder dialog box appears.
Stylus Studio creates a new project that contains the file you selected, or all files that are editable by Stylus Studio and that were in the directory hierarchy of the file you selected. The default name of the project is
Projectn. To rename the project, select
Project >
Save Project As from the Stylus Studio menu bar.
After you create the project, you can add additional ClearCase files to it. If the file is already in ClearCase, it must be a sibling of the original file you selected, or it must be a descendant of one of its siblings. If the file you want to add is not in the directory hierarchy of the original file, you must create a new Stylus Studio project and specify a directory in the source control hierarchy that contains all the files you want to be in your Stylus Studio project.
If you want to add a file that is not already in ClearCase, open the file in Stylus Studio and then click
Add To Source Control
in the Stylus Studio tool bar.
Stylus Studio supports the latest version of the Zeus CVS Provider, and with some additional configuration needed in the SourceControl > Properties dialog box.
The Project Wizards dialog box appears.
The Build Project From SCC dialog box appears.
CVSROOT environment variable that you use to access the CVS server.
For example, suppose you are required to enter the following commands in a DOS console or UNIX shell:
The value you should enter in the Auxiliary Path field would be:
Stylus Studio downloads the selected files and places them in the directory you specified in the Working Dir field. If you move these files from this directory, you must specify the new directory that contains the files in the Local Project Path field of the Source Control Properties dialog box. To open this dialog box, select SourceControl > Source Control Properties from the Stylus Studio menu bar.
All files that can be opened in Stylus Studio are now in the new Stylus Studio project. The default name of the project is
Projectn. To rename the project, select
File >
Project >
Save Project As from the Stylus Studio menu bar.
The Advanced button in the Build Project From SCC dialog box displays several additional fields.
$/Name/Name, ClearCase uses the name of the view, and CVS uses the name of the module. Some source control providers change this description to something more suitable to their model. For example, ClearCase changes it to
ClearCase Attache.
CVSROOT environment variable.
$/Company/OneProject to the local directory
c:\work\myproject. Your local files would map to the source control hierarchy as shown in
Table 4: