JAutodoc is an Eclipse Plugin for automatic adding Javadoc and file headers to your source code. It optionally generates initial comments from element name. Starting with Release 1.3 of JAutodoc it is possible to define Velocity templates for Javadoc and file headers.
/**
* NOTE: Without this method present and returning LanguageVersion.JAVA_1_5,
* Javadoc will not process generics because it assumes LanguageVersion.JAVA_1_1
* @return language version (hard coded to LanguageVersion.JAVA_1_5)
*/
public static LanguageVersion languageVersion() {
return LanguageVersion.JAVA_1_5;
}
What I usually do is, in Eclipse preferences, I define an Installed JRE called "JDK X.Y.Z" and include tools.jar as part of it libraries. Then I change the project preferences to use that JRE "JDK X.Y.Z".
Maven DocCheck Plugin is a report-type plugin for Apache Maven. It will create and register a report on missing and corrupt javadoc comments using the Sun Doc Check Doclet.
Generates documentation for the Java code in the project using the Doc Check Doclet. The default settings will suit many projects, and simply entering maven doccheck will create the standard documentation.
Never refer to the same JAR using Class-Path from two different modules. (It will get loaded twice and could cause strange problems.) If you think you need to, generally this just means you have not factored out your module dependencies thoroughly: split off a third module to hold the library.
S. Tan, D. Marinov, L. Tan, and G. Leavens. Software Testing, Verification and Validation (ICST), 2012 IEEE Fifth International Conference on, page 260-269. (April 2012)
N. Khamis, R. Witte, and J. Rilling. 15th International Conference on Applications of Natural Language to Information Systems (NLDB 2010), 6177, page 68--79. Cardiff, UK, Springer, (June 2010)