The File Browsers
On the left side of the main window, &tdevelop; can display various kinds of
lists and trees for the selection of files:
File Tree
This shows a tree view of the file hierarchy below the project directory. If
you click on a file, it is loaded into the editor. For files which do not
contain text, &tdevelop; starts an application that can handle the respective
MIME type.
The file tree is regularly updated whenever something changes in the file
system. For example, if you create new files or directories (even outside
&tdevelop;), this is immediately reflected in the file list. On &Linux;,
this feature makes use of the FAM library. On other operating systems or over
NFS, the directories shown are polled in small intervals.
The file tree hides files which are usually not interesting, like object
files. In the Project options under
File views, you can configure (as a comma separated
list of wildcards) which patterns are used to filter out irrelevant files.
Furthermore, you can decide to restrict the file tree to show only files which
belong to the currently loaded project. This can be toggled by clicking with
the right mouse button on the root item of the tree.
File Groups
This shows the files belonging to the project, grouped by their file name
extension. As in the file tree, you can edit a file by clicking on it
with the &LMB;.
The groups shown in this view can be configured under
File views in the
Project options dialog. In order to customize the
view to your needs, it is helpful to understand how files are distributed on
the groups. For each file, &tdevelop; goes through all groups from top to
bottom. In each group, it looks whether the file name matches one of the
patterns. If there is a match, the file is shown in this group and the
iteration is aborted. This makes it clear that more general patterns should
be put below more specific ones. For example, an asterisk for the
Other group should be the last pattern.