![]() If you've never used an IDE before, now would be an excellent time to look over the "Workbench basics" information available via the "Welcome" icon on the eclipse splash screen. The first time you run eclipse you will have to specify a place to hold your output files - in our case, the XML and schema files you'll be creating. On my Windows machine, I created an eclipse directory under my user directory and added a shortcut on my desktop for the "eclipse" application file. On a Linux machine, you're going to want the eclipse executable in your path. Installation consists of moving that directory tree to some convenient location, where "convenient" depends on your OS and how you prefer to work. ![]() Unzip the file to create the Eclipse installation directory tree. (Type "java -version" to check at your Linux command prompt.) The 64-bit version of Eclipse works well for that platform. ![]() (There are other solutions to this particular problem - adjusting which Eclipse version you download is probably the easiest.)Īs another example, Stef's desktop computer is a 64-bit machine running Scientific Linux, and the distributed JRE is 64-bit.
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