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Just lost 50% of my project. Why doesn't eclipse save automatically?

Comments
  • 3
    @thmnmlst I was so used to Android studio…
  • 12
    Because eclipse sucks balls. Use intellij.
  • 1
    You should have used git brother.. It's fast and easy also.. Rather than keeping a backup in another folder, it's better to keep it on cloud.
  • 4
    @tethys0 There's no such things a "The Cloud", just someone else's computer :p
  • 2
    @ScribeOfGoD Yead dude.. I spoke at a very abstract level..
  • 3
    What's so hard about a periodic ctrl+s? I don't want auto save, it would start to screw up some of my workflows with HMR.
  • 1
    @calmyourtities Use IntelliJ, Eclipse is evil. That's a fact.
  • 1
    Ctrl+s
  • 1
    I use a couple of jetbrains IDEs which save automatically but force of habbit has me hitting ctrl+s periodically. Also version control is great :)
  • 1
    My left hand is programmed to ctrl+s after every single module, and before switching a window lol.
  • 0
  • 4
    Deserved it.
    Sometimes you have to feel the pain to learn
  • 0
    @tethys0, you need to save stuff to be able to commit it to git.
  • 1
    @calmyourtities Why use Eclipse when you have Android Studio?
  • 0
    @Rishabh112 Android Studio is just based on IntelliJ IDEA.
  • 0
    I'd suggest using local VCS (e.g. git; you can always rebase before pushing). I also use CrashPlan backup which takes incremental backups of my workspace to a local drive and periodically backs up to the cloud for catastrophic situations.

    This is a lesson you should only learn once. Fix it now while you hate yourself a little. 😉
  • 1
    BTW, I'm pretty sure there is an autosave plugin for Eclipse.
  • 0
    @Rishabh112 Android studio was just for my app. I'm now working in a separate project.
  • 1
    @Eariel thanks, I'll look for it
  • 1
    Sublime! ♡
    Auto saves its buffers (not your files!) to allow restoring edits in case of a crash. These persist through reboots, too ~
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