He's right. I still don't understand your use case.

On Tuesday, October 8, 2013, Matthew Piggott wrote:

> You shouldn't need to generate or attach javadocs for sources in Eclipse,
> it should be handled automatically by JDT.  e.g. If you hover on a
> documented method name a tooltip should appear with the javadoc inside,
> alternatively you can click on the method name and open the Eclipse Javadoc
> view.
>
>
> On 8 October 2013 08:54, Steve Cohen <sco...@javactivity.org> wrote:
>
> I think you've missed my point.
>
> The javadocs I'm interested in viewing are not downloaded from anywhere.
>  I know how to view javadocs from the packages I'm es using in Eclipse.
> That's not an issue.  The issue is the javadocs being generated from the
> source we're writing as we're writing it.
>
> It's true, of course, that this is merely a nice-to-have.  You don't
> really NEED javadocs when you have the source right in front of you. But
> sometimes it's easier to read a well formed javadoc than to stare at an
> html-based javadoc comment in source.  Or maybe you'd like to test how that
> mass of html and text would format once converted to html.
>
> That was my use case, in case anyone else ever wants it.  For what it's
> worth, the solution again is:
>
> 1) accept the default location in the javadoc plugin (or another location
> if you'd rather
> 2) Set the project property for javadoc location to the directory chosen
> in step 1.
> 3) Now in the javadoc window a new context menu item will be present:
> Open Attached Javadoc (Shift-F2)
>
> This will show the javadoc for the item being edited in a browser window
> within Eclipse.
>
>
>
> On 10/03/2013 04:20 PM, Igor Fedorenko wrote:
>
> You should not need to do anything. m2e is expected to download and use
> dependency javadoc automatically. If automatic download does not work
> for whatever reason, there is right-click action to force download.
>
> --
> Regards,
> Igor
>
> On 2013-10-03 2:49 PM, Steve Cohen wrote:
>
> On 10/03/2013 01:31 PM, Igor Fedorenko wrote:
>
> This is a general Maven user quesrion and as such maven users mailing
> list is probably a better place to ask. Before you do, however, you may
> want to google maven-javadoc-plugin and see if this gives you the info
> you need.
>
> --
> Regards,
> Igor
>
> On 2013-10-03 1:47 PM, Steve Cohen wrote:
>
> We have a java client project built with maven and developed in
> Eclipse.
>   I would like to incorporate javadoc generation such that the javadocs
> would display in Eclipse on the Javadoc view.
>
> In other words, the javadocs are primarily of use to developers working
> on this project and not anywhere else.
>
> What is the easiest way to accomplish this?
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>
>  Yeah, I've looked there, but my question was aimed at how to configure
> it (the plugin) so the Eclipse Javadoc window showed it.
>
> Steve
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