[ANN] IdeaSpring 1.2.1
- Plugin is now commercial (see http://www.yanaware.com/ideaspring)
! All files with the xml type are accepted as config files (not only .xml files)
Bug Fix : init-method, destroy-method, replaced-method and lookup-method completion
! Beans imported by the import tag are now totally handled (was handled only in the browser)
+ Now the plugin verifies that idea-spring-parser.jar is in the lib directory
+ QuickFix : create a new bean from an unknown referenced one
+ Intention : converts full form of value and ref elements to shortcut form
+ Intention : converts shortcut form of value and ref elements to full form if the bean referenced is local
+ Refactoring : move bean
+ Refactoring : rename bean
+ Refactoring : rename alias
+ When you refactor a setter in a class the corresponding property in config files is renamed
+ Gutter Icons for classes injected into others (setters based)
+ Unknown class used in class attribute are now highlighted
+ Notation for inner classes is handled (MyClass$MyInnerClass)
+ Go to declaration for classes and setters
+ Property's name attribute validation
+ Error highlighting for bad bean references in properties
+ Error highlighting for constructors based on number of parameters
+ Error highlighting for bad methods (init-method, factory-method, ...)
+ Error highlighting for classes that are not concrete
+ SmartType completion for properties
+ Works in Demetra
+ Upgraded to SpringFramework 1.2.7
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I have to agree with the others that $50 is a lot of money for it especially when you compare it to the cost of commercial Eclipse plugins that provide Spring support and a lot more. I think $20 is about right. At that price, there's really no reason not to buy it. I think you would sell A LOT more at that price. If you keep going and add more sophisticated features with bean graphs or features not found in other plugins even for other IDEs, then a price increase might be justified.
Please understand that I think you deserver proper compensation for your efforts but I buy a lot of software. It costs me several hundred dollars a year just to maintain the licences I have now. I do this myself. I don't have a company paying for it. So it's getting to the point where I have to be very careful what I spend money on. The first thing I will do is ask, "How long will it take for me to get my $50 back from the increased productivity of the tool?" If it's longer than a month, I generally won't buy it.