Clion 1.2.1 keygen
Clion 1.2.1 keygen
Great news – CLion 2017.2 EAP starts now! We had a lot of work planned for this iteration, and especially one thing that was nearly ready for 2017.1 but got postponed in the end as it required more thoughtful development and testing. Today as a part of the 2017.2 EAP (build 172.1572.3), we give you Clang-Tidy integration.
As usual, you can install it side by side with your current stable CLion version, with no active subscription required. Continue reading.
A new CLion 2017.2 EAP is now available (build 172.2953.14.
C++ code analysis.
CLion supports va_* macros in a more accurate way now. This means less false-positive code analysis, like for example, incorrect unused code inspection (CPP-9748.
Besides, CLion now works more accurately with GCC and Clang compiler predefined macros.
After optimizing the parsing of the compiler predefined macros in CLion, some performance improvement during the reindexing was achieved.
CMake reload can take significant time, and sometimes you decide to cancel when it s already running (to introduce additional changes or just to postpone this time-consuming operation). It s now possible in CLion – Stop button is available in the CMake tool window: If you enable the auto-reload function, then currently running CMake command will be stopped automatically, in case you continue typing in CMake file, and the new one will be scheduled.
Besides, CLion now prints [Finished] in every output tab for each CMake configuration being reloaded and finished (not cancelled.
Check the full release notes here.
Your CLion Team The Drive to Develop.
This webinar will provide an introduction to developing large C/C++ projects using the package modularization and reuse offered by Conan package manager, and the power and convenience of the CLion IDE, using the CMake build system.
It will be demonstrated how to consume existing packages of popular C and C++ libraries like Poco, Boost, OpenSSL and ZLib, easily from the CLion environment. Then, how to create package will be explained, with a special focus on continuous development of packages from your own, evolving source code.
Join us Wednesday, July 11th, 4pm 5pm GMT (6pm 7pm CEST, 9am 10am PDT.
Space is limited.
About the presenters.
Diego s passions are robotics and SW engineering and development. He has developed many years in C and C++ in the Industrial, Robotics and AI fields. Diego was also a University (tenure track) professor and robotics researcher for 8 years, till 2012, when he quit academia to try to build a C/C++ dependency manager and co-founded a startup. Since then he mostly develops in Python. Diego is a open source C/C++ package manager co-creator and maintainer, now working at JFrog as SW engineer and C/C++ advocate.
Luis Martinez de Bartolome.
Luis is a full stack software engineer with more than 13 years of experience. He has spent the last 5 years mitigating the pains of C/C++ development flows dependency management. Co-founder of Conan and a proudly Frog , today spends his time developing Conan and its ecosystem, playing ukulele, growing hydroponic lettuces and enjoying his two kids.
Please, register now to reserve a seat.
It’s been a while since C++Now 2017 wrapped up in Aspen. As it was my first C++Now, I took some time to think it over before sharing my impressions. By the way, there are other trip reports: by Ben Deane. Michael Park and Odin Holmes.
In a few words, it was a fantastic opportunity to dive into cutting-edge C++, and hopefully survive. That means not only successfully escape from a major storm in Denver and Aspen’s snowy weather, but also meet dozens of clever people and dive into crazy ideas and libraries, that will become your everyday C++ routine tomorrow.
One exceptional thing about C++Now sessions, which makes this conference unique in comparison to CppCon, Meeting C++ and others, is a drive for discussions and collaboration. JetBrains is a C++Now video sponsor this year and, together with Bash Films, we make sure you’ll get high-quality video content from this year’s conference. Still, many valuable points will unfortunately be lost as they could not be recorded. Only there, high up in the Aspen mountains, could you experience.
Live discussions during the talks.
Free-time discussions.
Library-in-a-week activity and work on proposals going on day and night (sometimes literally.
C++ developers come to Aspen to contribute to the language, work on libraries that may later be included as a part of the standard, evaluate various proposals implementations, and suggest bright and revolutionary ideas and solutions to other developers.
For us, a tool vendor, this was a great opportunity not only to get a glimpse into how the language is evolving, but also to understand how to enhance our tools now so that they best work for C++ developers tomorrow.
Continue reading.
A new CLion 2017.2 EAP build (172.2827.9) is now available.
From C++ side this build includes some exception fixes and bundled CMake 3.8.2. Besides, there is a bunch of improvements to VCS support in CLion.
Commit messages.
Commit messages are part of a team communication process, so it s important to keep them easy-to-read and expressive, and formatting is quite important here. You might want to have a blank line between subject and body, or set a maximum text length, and for sure check the spelling in the comments. Reworked and moved to a separate page under Version Control . Commit Dialog settings allow you to do exactly that: Commit messages inspections are accompanied by quick-fixes to reformat the text.
If you committed your changes but not pushed yet and would like to change the commit message, you can do this with the new Reword action.
Check the full release notes here.
Your CLion Team The Drive to Develop.
We are glad to announce that new CLion 2017.2 Early Access Preview build ( 172.2465.12 ) is now available. Download it from our site or get a patch-update if you are using previous EAP build.
This build addresses the following issues.
Incorrect code analysis when std::enable_if is used (CPP-3632. CPP-9281.
For GCC5/6 CLion failed to resolve STL containers with nested template type correctly in case using namespace std was used. That caused incorrect no matching function and other errors when accessing container s member.(CPP-8638. CPP-9412. etc.). Please. note, for MinGW-W64 GCC 6.3 the problem is still there (CPP-9796.
Incorrect Declaration of const variable requires an initializer in case of a static const field (CPP-1145 ) or constexpr (CPP-9340.
Out of memory issue (regression) when the code uses boost::property_tree.
Git Revert command is now available in the Git Log view. Select any number of commits and call Revert from the context menu.
And there is more! Check the full list by the link.
Your CLion Team The Drive to Develop.
A new early access build for CLion 2017.2 ( 172.2273.4 ) is available.
Debugger improvements.
While inspecting arrays during debug, you might notice there was a limit of 50 elements shown by default. To see more user had to explicitly expand the next 50 elements. This was done to reduce performance issues. However, sometimes a few elements with big indexes are needed, and it s quite tiresome to click expand several times in a row.
In order to provide a solution to the problem, we ve added a registry value to control the default number of composite value s children.
A few other issues were resolved in CLion s GDB driver.
Debugger showed command time out when trying to attach to a non-existent local process.
Backslashes in program arguments on Windows were escaped incorrectly.
Conditional breakpoints were disabled because of the GDB bug (CPP-9336 ). A workaround was implemented in CLion.
Includes paths on Windows.
Includes paths on Windows were fixed to support absolute paths, paths with multiple backslashes and paths related to the root of the working disk.
Find full release notes here.
Your CLion Team The Drive to Develop.
It s been a while since we ve started CLion 2017.2 Early Access Program. We d like to thank those who has already given it a try and shared the feedback on the newly added Clang-Tidy integration.
This new EAP build (172.2103.9) comes with a set of fixes and improvements, as well as IntelliJ-platform wide enhancements.
CLion checks the configured toolchain by compiling a simple program and providing you with the results under Preferences/Settings | Build, Execution, Deployment | Toolchains. CLion now shows the diagnostic for the cases when errors happen. Click error label to open CMake Errors window.
Besides, CMake 3.8 was bundled into CLion.
Code analysis improvements.
This build includes a couple of fixes for various code analysis false-positives.
Error in analysis of full specializations from variadic templates (CPP-7313.
Incorrect analysis of function that take parameter pack arguments and non-template arguments (CPP-7336.
Incorrect Call to is ambiguous for member function vs. function in foreign namespace (CPP-9240.
Find in Path enhancements.
In CLion 2017.1 a compact popup window with immediate preview was implemented for Find in Path. Now it has a left gutter, where you can see navigation icons and local change markers.
There were some requests to keep this popup window visible, even after the user switch focus back to the editor. So now to close the popup you have to press Esc.
Better HiDPI support on Windows.
Instead of scaling IDE s UI according to the global settings (primary display), CLion now provides each display with its own scale factor. This is done for Windows, Linux support is coming. Also font settings are adjusted automatically based on the display resolution.
Full release notes are available here.
Your CLion Team The Drive to Develop.
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