I'm developing an IntelliJ plugin that has its own tool window. The plugin should invoke IntelliJ's built-in rename refactor function to rename a variable when the user presses a key. When I run my example the following exception is thrown when I press a key to invoke the rename refactor function:
2020-05-16 23:03:17,741 [ 41062] ERROR - llij.ide.plugins.PluginManager - EventQueue.isDispatchThread()=false Toolkit.getEventQueue()=com.intellij.ide.IdeEventQueue@574ed46a
Current thread: Thread[JavaFX Application Thread,6,Idea Thread Group] 648578026
Write thread (volatile): Thread[AWT-EventQueue-0,6,Idea Thread Group] 807407917com.intellij.openapi.diagnostic.Attachment@339b1167
com.intellij.openapi.diagnostic.RuntimeExceptionWithAttachments: EventQueue.isDispatchThread()=false Toolkit.getEventQueue()=com.intellij.ide.IdeEventQueue@574ed46a
Current thread: Thread[JavaFX Application Thread,6,Idea Thread Group] 648578026
Write thread (volatile): Thread[AWT-EventQueue-0,6,Idea Thread Group] 807407917com.intellij.openapi.diagnostic.Attachment@339b1167
at com.intellij.openapi.application.impl.ApplicationImpl.assertIsWriteThread(ApplicationImpl.java:1068)
at com.intellij.openapi.application.impl.ApplicationImpl.startWrite(ApplicationImpl.java:1154)
at com.intellij.openapi.application.impl.ApplicationImpl.runWriteAction(ApplicationImpl.java:974)
at MyToolWindowFactory.handle(MyToolWindowFactory.java:55)
at MyToolWindowFactory.handle(MyToolWindowFactory.java:17)
I thought that calling the setName
function as a lambda inside ApplicationManager.getApplication().runWriteAction
would work, but apparently not. How can I get it to work?
Here is the complete code I used.
import com.intellij.openapi.application.ApplicationManager;
import com.intellij.openapi.fileEditor.FileEditorManager;
import com.intellij.openapi.project.Project;
import com.intellij.openapi.vfs.VirtualFile;
import com.intellij.openapi.wm.ToolWindow;
import com.intellij.openapi.wm.ToolWindowFactory;
import com.intellij.psi.*;
import javafx.embed.swing.JFXPanel;
import javafx.event.EventHandler;
import javafx.scene.Scene;
import javafx.scene.input.KeyEvent;
import javafx.scene.layout.VBox;
import org.jetbrains.annotations.NotNull;
import javax.swing.*;
public class MyToolWindowFactory implements ToolWindowFactory, EventHandler<KeyEvent> {
PsiField[] variables;
@Override
public void createToolWindowContent(@NotNull Project project, @NotNull ToolWindow toolWindow) {
final JFXPanel fxPanel = new JFXPanel();
JComponent component = toolWindow.getComponent();
ApplicationManager.getApplication().invokeLater(() -> {
PsiClass currentClass = getCurrentClass(project);
variables = currentClass.getFields();
Scene scene = new Scene(new VBox(), 400, 250);
scene.setOnKeyPressed(this);
fxPanel.setScene(scene);
fxPanel.requestFocus();
});
component.getParent().add(fxPanel);
}
private PsiClass getCurrentClass(Project project) {
// Get the currently selected file.
FileEditorManager manager = FileEditorManager.getInstance(project);
VirtualFile[] files = manager.getSelectedFiles();
VirtualFile currentFile = files[0];
// Get the PsiClass for the currently selected file.
PsiFile psiFile = PsiManager.getInstance(project).findFile(currentFile);
PsiJavaFile psiJavaFile = (PsiJavaFile)psiFile;
final PsiClass[] classes = psiJavaFile.getClasses();
return classes[0];
}
@Override
public void handle(KeyEvent event) {
ApplicationManager.getApplication().runWriteAction(() -> {
variables[0].setName("newVariableName");
});
}
}
One way to get it to work is to call the rename function from the WriteCommandAction.runWriteCommandAction
method. In addition calling just setName
only renames the variable declaration. To rename all references to the variable I first searched for all the variable's references with the ReferencesSearch.search
method, and then called handleElementRename
on each reference.
public void handle(KeyEvent event) {
Runnable r = ()->
{
for (PsiReference reference : ReferencesSearch.search(variables[0])) {
reference.handleElementRename(variableName);
}
variables[0].setName(variableName);
}
WriteCommandAction.runWriteCommandAction(project, r);
}
Got the hint to use WriteCommandAction
from here:
https://intellij-support.jetbrains.com/hc/en-us/community/posts/206754235