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We have installed arbortext editor 8 in our system and doing some implementation using eclipse.
For that we need com.arbortext.epic.Document; and com.arbortext.epic.Application which needs epic.jar file.
We are not able to see epic.jar file in Arbortext editor installation path.
Can you please help us to find location of epic.jar file.
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hello @AP_9954922
I believe from the case you raised to PTC Technical Support that your question has been answered with the following details - As you now have the resolution as listed below - please click on 'Accept as Solution':
Would like to inform you again that there is no epic.jar available anymore in release 8.2x. From what I can see com.arbortext.epic is, in AOM jar now, please find the below article for your reference:
https://www.ptc.com/en/support/article/CS278782
However, if you are still curious to find that particular jar, you could look at the release trees to figure out the last version it was supplied with but as I mentioned I think AOM.jar replaces it.
Please be aware that coding a customization as per your requirements would be beyond the scope of standard Technical Support. If you contact a PTC Partner they could give you a quote to create this per your specific requirements. Please see: https://www.ptc.com/en/support/customer-support-guide/guidelines_legal-arbortext/assistance-using-arbortext-products.
There is no method with the name “getFileName()” in the Document interface. That’s the reason this piece of line is not compliable over the console when you are trying to compile the class by adding the aom.jar in your classpath as per your screenshot.
I would recommend you to go through the documentation of org.w3c.dom.Document to see what methods they have and what they return. I’m not an expert on the customization part but you can give it a try with getDocumentURI() shown below:-
Document doc=Application.getActiveDocument();
String filename = doc.getDocumentURI();
For more details on the Document interface. Refer to the documentation<https://docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/org/w3c/dom/Document.html#getDocumentURI()>.
Hi @AP_9954922,
Thank you for your question.
Your post appears well documented but has not yet received any response. I am replying to raise awareness. Hopefully, another community member will be able to help.
Also, feel free to add any additional information you think might be relevant. It sometimes helps to have screenshots to better understand what you are trying to do.
Thank you for your participation!
Hello,
I see you have raised a case with the PTC Technical Support Team with regard to this question.
Please could I ask that once you have feedback from PTC you update this post and set it as Resolved.
This way other Users of the Community will also be up to date with the question you have posted
Best wishes
Alexia
Hi All,
Still I am not able to find the solution.
Anyone who are aware of epic.jar file, please help to find epic.jar file.
Hello @AP_9954922
I believe from the case you raised to PTC Technical Support that your question has been answered with the following details - As you now have the resolution as listed below - please click on 'Accept as Solution':
Would like to inform you again that there is no epic.jar available anymore in release 8.2x. From what I can see com.arbortext.epic is, in AOM jar now, please find the below article for your reference:
https://www.ptc.com/en/support/article/CS278782
However, if you are still curious to find that particular jar, you could look at the release trees to figure out the last version it was supplied with but as I mentioned I think AOM.jar replaces it.
Please be aware that coding a customization as per your requirements would be beyond the scope of standard Technical Support. If you contact a PTC Partner they could give you a quote to create this per your specific requirements. Please see: https://www.ptc.com/en/support/customer-support-guide/guidelines_legal-arbortext/assistance-using-arbortext-products.
There is no method with the name “getFileName()” in the Document interface. That’s the reason this piece of line is not compliable over the console when you are trying to compile the class by adding the aom.jar in your classpath as per your screenshot.
I would recommend you to go through the documentation of org.w3c.dom.Document to see what methods they have and what they return. I’m not an expert on the customization part but you can give it a try with getDocumentURI() shown below:-
Document doc=Application.getActiveDocument();
String filename = doc.getDocumentURI();
For more details on the Document interface. Refer to the documentation<https://docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/org/w3c/dom/Document.html#getDocumentURI()>.