About JQuery
The Eclipse JDT comes with a variety of tools that help
you navigate and reason about source code such as the Package
Explorer, Outline, and Hierarchy views. However,
each of these views takes up valuable screen space and it can quickly
become disorienting and difficult to find information, or even to code
with 3 or 4 views open. JQuery solves this problem by combining all of
this information into one view, allowing you to retain the context in
which you were looking for something, making it harder to get lost in
your code.
JQuery is a query-based source code browser plug-in for
Eclipse. It allows you to run queries that generate various views of
your source code. New views can be defined by writing logic queries and
running them against your source code. You can run top-level-queries
that operate on a whole working set or run sub-queries on individual
results of a larger query. There are many pre-written queries that can
be run as-is or modified to suit a specific purpose.
The query engine used in JQuery is a logic programming
engine, implemented in Java, called TyRuBa. The syntax of TyRuBa is
similar to that of Prolog, a popular logic programming language. A set
of TyRuBa predicates and rules have been defined that make up the
JQuery query language. These predicates operate on a fact database that
is generated from walking the Eclipse JDT abstract syntax tree (for
.java files) and parsing java bytecode (for .class files). JQuery uses
the ASM bytecode manipulation framework for parsing .class files.
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