
This, presumably, means that anyone without a valid (company) OSS user cannot get it. PS: in order to get hold of the SAPUI5 IDE plugin, I had to download it from the SAP Marketplace. I have two questions: 1: do I really have to manually install the SAPUI5 plugins into my AWS-provided Eclipse to do UI5 development, or are the necessary features already there 2: If I have to install manually, can I do this on Indigo, or do I have to 'migrate' to Juno (and if so, how) I tried to install the plugins for UI5 into my Indigo version, but it now complains about missing. This is a bit messy, but maybe a sign of where SAP is moving: away from the tried-and-tested all-in-one-box one-size-fits-all SE80, into the choppy and somewhat murky seas of Open Source :-) The third party licensees of these components may provide additional license rights, terms and conditions and/or require certain notices as described below. I have two questions: 1: do I really have to manually install the SAPUI5 plugins into my AWS-provided Eclipse to do UI5 development, or are the necessary features already there? 2: If I have to install manually, can I do this on Indigo, or do I have to "migrate" to Juno (and if so, how?) I tried to install the plugins for UI5 into my Indigo version, but it now complains about missing prerequisites (some web-ui plugin, which I cannot identify or find, even when enabling the Indigo download page in my install preferences.) This program contains the following third party open source or other free download components that are not part of the SAP software and not subject to your SAP license and/or maintenance agreement.


Eclipse free download with ui5 how to#
I notice that Thomas is on Juno, but as I got my HANA Studio from my AWS installation, I cannot easily change to a newer version (not sure how to "migrate" my Indigo plug-ins for HANA Studio to a newer Eclipse version). I'm following the Thomas Jung video tutorials for SAP Hana XS, and have tried to install the SAPUI5 plugin into my Eclipse Indigo version.
