IntelliJ IDEA 2019.3

주요 성능 및 유용성 향상을 제공합니다.
11월 29, 2019
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기능

  • Faster startup - One of the major performance improvements in this release is that startup times are shorter than ever. This release introduces substantial architectural changes to parallelize some of the tasks the IDE performs at startup so that they are not performed sequentially.
  • Reduced memory consumption - IntelliJ IDEA 2019.3 optimizes performance to reduce peak memory consumption when importing large Gradle projects.
  • Responsive UI - Over 1600 UI freeze reports have been fixed. This release also includes fixes for issues with editing POM.xml files in Maven projects, where completion suggestions are now displayed without any delays. Other fixes have resulted in faster processing of VCS status updates in large projects, better handling of ignored files, faster rendering of the project tree, better performance when working with a large number of editor or debugger tabs, and more speedups.
  • Better Java performance - This release brings lots of improvements for Java type inference, which not only fix various editor freezes but also speed up Java type inference for long method call chains. The ‘Join Lines’ action works faster when applied to multiple lines. You’ll also experience accelerated highlighting for Java code, especially when it comes to methods with generic var-args into which dozens of arguments are placed.
  • Better Kotlin performance - IntelliJ IDEA 2019.3 bundles Kotlin 1.3.60, which provides some impressive speedups such as faster highlighting in the editor.
  • Installing theme and keymap plugins without restarting the IDE - IntelliJ IDEA 2019.3 implements support for dynamic plugin installation, which means that now you can load and unload theme and keymap plugins without restarting the IDE.
  • More noticeable scrollbar - If you have had difficulty seeing the scrollbar, you now have the possibility to make it stand out. Just enable the ‘Use contrast scrollbars’ setting under Settings/Preferences | Appearance & Behavior | Appearance.
  • Smooth scrolling - A small but very valuable improvement is to scrolling, which is now much smoother when done using the mouse wheel.
  • Automatic configuration of imported Maven or sbt projects - Now when you import, create, or open an sbt or Maven project, IntelliJ IDEA will automatically set it up for you, so you no longer need to configure the settings manually.
  • Reworked behavior of context actions - In the intention actions dialog, the IDE now shows all available intention actions by default, even after you’ve chosen an action and closed the dialog.
  • Extended support for Java 13 features - This release has extended support for Java 13 text blocks: they are formatted automatically when inserting a third quote.
  • More template languages can be injected - With IntelliJ IDEA 2019.3, you can inject more template languages into your code, specifically Pug (ex-Jade), Handlebars, EJS, and Slim.
  • New ‘Field Call Hierarchy’ action - There’s now a simple way to view the hierarchy of a selected field by calling the new ‘Field Call Hierarchy’ action with Ctrl+Alt+H.
  • Unified popup for errors and documentation - When you hover the mouse over a symbol highlighted by an inspection, now you can have the popup also display the error, in addition to showing code reference information. To enable this, select ‘Show quick documentation on mouse move’ in Settings/Preferences | Editor | General.
  • Improved Git checkout workflow - To eliminate confusion, the newly renamed ‘Checkout’ action called on a remote branch now creates a new local branch, checks it out, and sets tracking to the upstream. This release also adds a ‘New Branch from Selected’ action for local and remote branches, which creates a new local branch and checks it out, but doesn’t set tracking to any remote branch.
  • A simpler way to push branches - Another time-saver you’ll be glad to discover is that you no longer need to check out a branch to push it - you can simply select a branch in the Git branches popup and push it from there.
  • Unified ‘clone’ experience - This version reworks the ‘Clone’ dialog to unify the UI for getting projects from different VCS hosting services. If you’re already logged in to your VCS, the IDE displays a list of available repositories that you can choose from, so you no longer need to enter a repository URL.
  • More insight into merge conflicts - Now when a conflict occurs during a merge, rebase, or cherry-pick operation, you can get more information about the source of the changes displayed in the Merge dialog. Simply click the ‘Show Details’ link to get the list of commits that led to the resulting code state.
  • Microservices frameworks support - To help keep your IntelliJ IDEA projects technologically relevant, version 2019.3 adds initial support for Micronaut, Quarkus, and Helidon. You can enjoy full coding assistance, navigation, inspections, find usages, and other goodies if you employ a microservice-based architecture for your Java projects.
  • OpenAPI and Swagger support - This release introduces support for Swagger v2 and OpenAPI v2, which provides validation by schema, as well as code completion, navigation, find usages, and the Rename refactoring in YAML/JSON files containing API descriptions.
  • New Endpoints view - The brand-new ‘Endpoints’ tool window provides an aggregated view of both client and server APIs used in your project for HTTP and Web Socket protocols. What is more, you can extend the view to all projects currently opened in IntelliJ IDEA.
  • Spring Web Flux support - View the full list of Web Flux URL mappings in the MVC view in the Spring tool window, navigate between them, and benefit from coding assistance, search, and the Rename refactoring for URLs and URL segments.
  • Java HTTP Clients support - IntelliJ IDEA 2019.3 brings URL support in the following Java HTTP client APIs: java.net.{URI/URL}, Retrofit v2, OkHttp v3, and Injectable URL reference. Coding assistance, navigation, find usages – everything you’re used to in Java is now available for HTTP clients.
  • Project Reactor support - Take advantage of inspections for Java and Kotlin Reactor projects, which report thread-blocking method calls detected in code fragments where a thread should not be blocked. The IDE will also warn you about the potential return of null from lambda operators of Flux and Mono methods. On top of that, there’s a dedicated Reactor debug mode that provides a helpful view of the reactive stack frames and intermediate variable values.
  • MongoDB support - IntelliJ IDEA 2019.3 comes with long-awaited MongoDB support. After you’ve added a MongoDB data source, view collections and fields in the database explorer, run queries, and review query results. We’re going to extend MongoDB support in future releases.
More noticeable scrollbar

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