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According to Gen 6:1-4, these divine beings took wives from the beautiful daughters of men.
Contents
- Watchers in the Old Testament
- Watchers in Jewish Midrash
- Watchers in 1 Enoch
- Watchers in The Book of Jubilees
- Watchers in 2 Enoch
- Watchers in Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs
- Josephus’ Antiquities of the Jews
- Philo’s Commentary on Genesis 6
- Names and Misdeeds of the Watchers
There are two basic versions of the fallen angels story: the fall of the Watchers, discussed here, and the fall of Lucifer. The Watchers were the “sons of God” who took human wives, and had children. Their children were known as the Nephilim.
Watchers in the Old Testament
“When men began to increase on earth and daughters were born to them, the divine beings saw how beautiful the daughters of men were and took wives from among those that pleased them. The LORD said, ‘My breath shall not abide in man forever, since he too is flesh; let the days allowed him be one hundred and twenty years.’ It was then, and later too, that the Nephilim appeared on earth – when the divine beings cohabited with the daughters of men, who bore them offspring. They were the heroes of old, the men of renown.” – Genesis 6:1-4
This is the only account of the watchers in the Bible. Isaiah 14:12-15 talks of the fall of the “day-star, son of morning,” which implies that there was a revolt, and the “day-star” was cast into the abyss, but this may be a reference to early Canaanite or Phoenician myths. One other possible reference is Psalm 82.
God standeth in the Congregation of God (El)
In the midst of gods (elohim) He judgeth
All the foundations of the earth are moved.
I said: Ye are gods,
And all of you sons of the Most High (Elyon)
Nevertheles ye shall die like men,
And fall like one of the princes (sarim)
Psalm 82:1, 5-7
In the midst of gods (elohim) He judgeth
All the foundations of the earth are moved.
I said: Ye are gods,
And all of you sons of the Most High (Elyon)
Nevertheles ye shall die like men,
And fall like one of the princes (sarim)
Psalm 82:1, 5-7
The parts of the Psalm I have left out are the parts that refer to wicked earthly rulers, but it is agreed upon by many scholars that this part of the Psalm refers to the fallen angels. While Genesis 6 tells that angels married women, it does not condemn this as a sin. Psalm 82 tells that the Elohim sinned, but does not tell how (i.e. it does not mention that they married women).
Some rabbis have speculated that the angels’ sin was to reproduce. Certain passages in Jewish Midrash talk of how angels are immortal and do not need to reproduce. Since humans are not, they must reproduce in order to achieve immortality in their descendants.
Watchers in Jewish Midrash
This is a passage from Jewish midrash in which Hannah is praying for a child at Shiloh:
“Lord of the Universe! The celestials never die, and they do not reproduce their kind. Terrestrial beings die, but they are fruitful and multiply. Therefore I pray: Either make me immortal, or give me a son!”
Watchers in 1 Enoch (Part 1)
A different interpretation of this passage concerning the sin of the angels was that they revolted against God, and because of this, they were cast down. Apocryphal texts give more complete accounts of the fall of the angels. (For more about texts found outside the bible, see Pseudepigrapha and Enoch) Miracle box thunder 2.83 crack download.
1 Enoch gives an account of the fall of the Angels from heaven. Chapter 6 talks about how the angels saw and lusted after the daughters of men.
“In those days, when the children of man had multiplied, it happened that there were born unto them handsome and beautiful daughters. And the angels, the children of heaven , saw them and desired them; and they said to one another, ‘Come, let us choose wives for ourselves from among the daughters of man and beget us children.’ And Semyaz, being their leader, said unto them,’I fear that perhaps you will not consent that this deed should be done, and I alone will become (responsible) for this great sin.’ But they all responded to him, ‘Let us all swear an oath and bind everyone among us by a curse not to abandon this suggestion but to do the deed.’ Then they all swore together and bound one another by (the curse) And they were altogether two hundred;” – 1 Enoch 6:1-7
The angels descended on Mount Hermon during the days of Jared. There were 19 leaders mentioned in 1 Enoch, who were also called ‘the chiefs of ten.’ Once they reached the earth:
“they took wives unto themselves, and everyone (respectively) chose one woman for himself, and they began to go unto them. And they taught them magical medicine, incantations, the cutting of roots, and taught them (about) plants. And the women became pregnant and gave birth to great giants whose heights were three hundred cubits. These (giants) consumed the produce of all the people until the people detested feeding them. So the giants turned against (the people) in order to eat them.” – 1 Enoch 7:1-5
The Angels then taught women charms, enchantments, the cutting of roots, and the knowledge of plants. They taught men how to make various weapons and armor, and also arts and sciences. These acts led to an increase in lawlessness and warfare. The men of earth then cried out to heaven, and the 4 archangels (Michael, Uriel, Raphael, and Gabriel) cried out to God. In response, God sent Uriel to warn Noah that there would soon be a flood that would destroy the wickedness on earth.
Raphael was commanded to bind Azazel hand and foot, and to cast him into the a hole in the desert (Duda’el) that the Lord had made. Raphael threw rugged and sharp rocks and covered Azazel’s face so that he would not see light. Michael was commanded to bound Semyaza and his associates in the valleys of the earth. They will remain there until the day of judgment when he will be cast into the fire.
The race of giants produced from this union gave way to a brood of evil spirits. The evil spirits most likely are the departed spirits of the giants, themselves. These spirits are not material or corporeal beings, but they torment mankind because they have proceeded from them. According to 1 Enoch, these spirits will not be punished until the day of judgment, in contrast to the Watchers, who are punished both before and on the day of judgment.
“But now the giants who are born from the (union of) the spirits and the flesh shall be called evil spirits upon the earth, because their dwelling shall be upon the earth and inside the earth. Evil spirits have come out of their bodies. Because from the day that they were created from the holy ones they became the Watchers; their first origin is the spiritual foundation. They will become evil upon the earth and shall be called evil spirits. The dwelling of the spiritual beings of heaven is heaven; but the dwelling of the spirits of the earth, which are born upon the earth, is in the earth. The spirits of the giants oppress each other, they will corrupt, fall, be excited, and fall upon the earth, and cause sorrow. They eat no food, nor become thirsty, nor find obstacles. And these spirits shall rise up against the children of the people and against the women, because they have proceeded forth (from them). – 1 Enoch 15
1 Enoch 19 also gives a variation to the origin of demons. It implies that demons were already in existence during the time of the fall of the angels. According to 1 Enoch 10-16, the demons are the spirits which go forth from these angels.
“Here shall stand in many different appearances the spirits of the angels which have united themselves with women. They have defiled the people and will lead them into error so that they will offer sacrifices to the demons as unto gods, until the great day of judgment in which they shall be judged till they are finished.” – 1 Enoch 19:1
1 Enoch 85-90 gives a similar account of the fall of the angels. In these passages, a star (either Semjaza or Azazel) fell from heaven and began to pasture among the oxen (mankind). A number of stars then fell and were transformed into bulls. They began to cover the cows (the angels married mortal women), who then gave birth to elephants, camels, and asses (the giants). The oxen then became restless and began to fight, but they became prey to the wild beasts. The archangels then appear in the disguise of men. One seizes the first of the fallen stars and casts it into the abyss. A second gives the elephants, camels, and asses a sword so that they will slay each other. A third archangel stones the other fallen stars and casts them into the gulf. The story then goes on to describe the Maccabean revolt, which leads to a description of the final struggle between good and evil.
It seems that there is a threefold aspect to the sin of the Watchers in these accounts. First, it was a defilement of the essence of the angels to marry and engage in sexual acts with human women. Second, these unions between the angels and mortal women were considered evil, themselves. Because of the Nephilim and and evil created by these unions, God caused the great Flood of Noah’s time. Finally, the angels sinned because they taught humanity and revealing the secrets of the natural universe which God did not intend for man to know.
Watchers in The Book of Jubilees
The Book of Jubilees gives another account of how the Watchers fell that is similar to 1 Enoch. It explains that the Watchers originally descended to the earth to teach mankind and do what is just, but they ‘sinned with the daughters of men because these had begun to mix with earthly women so that they became defiled.’ (Jubilees 4:22)
Malalael “named [his son] Jared because during his lifetime the angels of the Lord who were called Watchers descended to earth to teach mankind and to do what is just and upright upon the earth” – Jubilees 4:15
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Jubilees also says that they were sent by God, Himself.
“Against his angels whom he had sent to the earth he was angry enough to uproot them from all their (positions of) authority” – Jubilees 5:6
Jubilees tells an account of the fall of the angels similar to that of 1 Enoch. God was displeased with the angels because of their lust for the daughters of men. The union of the angels and women is said to be the Nephilim.
“For it was on account of these three things [fornication, uncleanness, and injustice – see Jubilees 7:20] that the flood was on the earth, since (it was) due to fornication that the Watchers had illicit intercourse – apart from the mandate of their authority – with women. When they married of them whomever they chose they committed the first (acts) of uncleanness. They fathered (as their) sons the Nephilim. – Jubilees 7:21-22
In Jubilees, Mastema is the chief of the spirits. As God commanded the angels to bind all the evil spirits, Mastema came and asked the Lord that some of the spirits might be allowed to remain with him to do his will. God granted his request and allowed one-tenth of the spirits to remain with Mastema, while the other nine parts would be condemned.
“When Mastema, the leader of the spirits, came, he said: ‘Lord creator, leave some of them before me; let them listen to me and do everything that I tell them, because if none of them is left for me I shall not be able to exercise the authority of my will aong mankind. For they are meant for (the purposes of) destroying and misleading before my punishment because the evil of mankind is great.’ Then he said that a tenth of them should be left before him, while he would make nine parts descend to the place of judgment.” – Jubilees 10:8-9
Watchers in 2 Enoch
2 Enoch also mentions a group of angels called the Grigori, who are similar to the Watchers. Their prince is called Satanail. A difference in this account as compared with the two previous accounts is that only 3 angels came down to earth to take wives and beget giants.
“These are the Grigori, who with their prince Satanail rejected the Lord of light, and after them are those who are held in great darkness on the second heaven, and three of them went down on earth to the place Ermon, and broke through their vows on the shoulder of the hill Ermon and saw the daughters of men how good they are, and took to themselves wives, and befouled the earth with their deeds, who in all times of their age made lawlessness and mixing, and giants are born and marvellous big men and great enmity. And therefore God judged them with great judgment, and they weep for their brethren and they will be punished on the Lord’s great day.” – 2 Enoch 18:3-4
Watchers in Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs
In the Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs, the fall of the angels is mentioned twice. One is only a brief reference stating that the Watchers “changed the order of their nature.” (Naphtali 3:5) The second is in Reuben, where he accuses womankind of seeking to ensnare men.
“Thus they allured the Watchers before the Flood, for as these continually beheld them, they lusted after them and conceived the act in their mind; for they changed themselves unto the shape of men and appeared to them when they were with their husbands; and the women, lusting in their minds after their forms, gave birth to giants, for the Watchers appeared to them as reaching up to heaven.” (Reuben 5)
In this account, the writer denies that there was a physical union between the angels and mortal women. He says that the real fathers of the giants were humans, but the giants were conceived from the mutal passion from angels and women.
Flavius Josephus’ Antiquities of the Jews
Flavius Josephus,a Palestinian, wrote his Antiquities of the Jews to educate the Roman-Hellenistic world about Judaism and the Jews. In it, he recounts the tale of the Watchers as follows:
For many angels of God accompanied with women, and begat sons that proved unjust, and despisers of all that was good, on account of the confidence they had in their own strength; for the tradition is, that these men did what resembled the acts of those whom the Grecians call giants. But Noah was very uneasy at what they did; and being displeased at their conduct, persuaded them to change their dispositions and their acts for the better: but seeing they did not yield to him, but were slaves to their wicked pleasures, he was afraid they would kill him, together with his wife and children, and those they had married; so he departed out of that land. – 1.72-75
According to Josephus, the union between the fallen angels and human women produced a race of giants, which in antiquity were called Nephilim.
Philo’s Commentary on Genesis 6
Philo of Alexandria (20 B.C.E.-50 C.E.) wrote a commentary of Genesis 6 called Concerning the Giants. In it, he emphasized that the passage was not a myth.
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“And when the angels of God saw the daughters of men that they were beautiful, they took unto themselves wives of all of them whom they Chose.”{#ge 6:2.} Those beings, whom other philosophers call demons, Moses usually calls angels; and they are souls hovering in the air. And let no one suppose, that what is here stated is a fable, for it is necessarily true that the universe must be filled with living things in all its parts, since every one of its primary and elementary portions contains its appropriate animals and such as are consistent with its nature; –the earth containing terrestrial animals, the sea and the rivers containing aquatic animals, and the fire such as are born in the fire (but it is said, that such as these last are found chiefly in Macedonia), and the heaven containing the stars: for these also are entire souls pervading the universe, being unadulterated and divine, inasmuch as they move in a circle, which is the kind of motion most akin to the mind, for every one of them is the parent mind. It is therefore necessary that the air also should be full of living beings. And these beings are invisible to us, inasmuch as the air itself is not visible to mortal sight. (But it does not follow, because our sight is incapable of perceiving the forms of souls, that for that reason there are no souls in the air; but it follows of necessity that they must be comprehended by the mind, in order that like may be contemplated by like.
– Philo, On the Giants II: 6-9
– Philo, On the Giants II: 6-9
Names and Misdeeds of the Watchers
Names and Misdeeds of the Fallen Angels (aka the Five Satans) in 1 Enoch 69:4-12. (1 Enoch gives other lists of the names of the fallen angels as well.) This passage is odd because it mentions angels that are not mentioned elsewhere.
Names of other fallen angels – Semyaz, Aristaqis, Armen, Kokba’el, Tur’el, Rumyal, Danyul, Neqa’el, Baraqel, Azaz’el, Armaros, Betryal, Basas’el, Hanan’el, Tur’el, Sipwese’el, Yeter’el, Tuma’el, Tur’el, Rum’el, and Azaz’el – 1 Enoch 69:2
Reference
- Article: Azazel
- Article: Fallen Angels and the Old Testament
- Article: Nephilim in Genesis and Deuteronomy
- Article: About The Book of Enoch
- Book: Dictionary of Angels Including the Fallen Ones
- Book: The Apocalyptic Imagination
- Book: The Devil: Perceptions of Evil from Antiquity to Primitive Christianity
- Book: Fallen Angels – The Soldiers of Satan’s Realm by Bernard Bamberger. ISBN: 156619850X (c) 1952
- Book: Satan, a Portrait by Edward Langton. ISBN: 0848215621 (c) 1977
File Watcher is a IntelliJ IDEA tool that allows you to automatically run a command-line tool like compilers, formatters, or linters when you change or save a file in the IDE.
File watchers have two dedicated code inspections:
- The File watcher available inspection is run in every file where a predefined File Watcher is applicable. If the project has no relevant File Watcher configured, IntelliJ IDEA suggests to add one.
- The File watcher problems inspection is invoked by a running File Watcher and highlights errors specific to it.
You can use one of the available templates or configure a File Watcher from scratch. A configured File Watcher can be saved in your project settings or in the IDE settings and used in different projects.
- When you open a file where a predefined File Watcher is applicable, IntelliJ IDEA displays a pane where suggests activating it.Click Yes to activate the File Watcher with the default configuration.
- If you click No, IntelliJ IDEA considers the suggested File Watcher suppressed. You can still create and enable it manually as described in Creating a File Watcher below.
For information on File watchers for specific tools, see the corresponding pages:
Note that using some of these tools in IntelliJ IDEA requires that you install plugins on the Settings/Preferences | Plugins page as described in Installing plugins from JetBrains repository.
Before you start
Install and enable the File Watchers plugin on the Settings/Preferences | Plugins page as described in Installing plugins from JetBrains repository.
Creating a File Watcher
- In the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, click File Watchers under Tools. The File Watchers page opens showing a list of File Watchers that are already configured in this project and in the IDE.
- Click and choose the predefined template from which you want to create a File Watcher. The choice depends on the tool you are going to use. To use a tool that is not on the list, choose Custom. The New Watcher dialog opens.
- In the Name field, type the name of the File Watcher. By default, IntelliJ IDEA suggests the name of the selected predefined template.
Configuring the expected type and location of input files
Use the controls in the Files to watch area to define the range of files where you want to apply the File Watcher.
- From the File type list, choose the expected type of input files. The File Watcher will consider only files of this type as subject for analyzing and processing. File types are recognised based on associations between file types and file extensions.By default, the field shows the file type in accordance with the chosen predefined template.
- Select the Scope in which the File Watcher is applicable.Changes in these files will invoke the File Watcher either immediately or upon save or frame deactivation, depending on the status of the Auto-save edited files to trigger the watcher checkbox.Select one of the predefined scopes from the list. For a project-level File Watcher, you can also click to configure a custom scope in the Scopes dialog that opens.
- All Places: https://coolhup133.weebly.com/cube-world-for-mac-os.html. all the scopes listed below.
- Project Files: all the files within the project content roots (see Content roots).
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- Project Test Files: all the files within the project test source roots.
- Scratches and Consoles: all the files from the Scratches and Consoles directory located in the Project tool window.
- Open Files: all the files that are currently opened in the editor.
- Current File: the file opened in the active editor tab.
VCS Scopes: these scopes are only available if your project is under version control.- All Changed Files: all changed files, that is, all files associated with all existing changelists.
- Default Changelist: all the files associated with the changelist
Default
.
Alternatively, click and configure a custom scope in the Scopes dialog that opens.See Scopes and file colors for details. - Optionally: specify how you want the File Watcher to deal with dependencies. A root file is a file that is not included (for example via
import
) in any other file within the specified scope.- To run the File Watcher only against root files, select the Track only root files checkbox.
- Clear the checkbox to run the File Watcher against the file from which it is invoked and against all the files in which this file is recursively included within the specified scope.
Note that the Scope setting overrides the Track only root files checkbox setting: if a dependency is outside the specified scope, the File Watcher is not applied to it.This option is available only for Babel, Closure Compiler, Jade, Less, Sass/SCSS, Stylus, and UglifyJS.
Configuring interaction with the external tool
In the Tool to run on changes area, specify the tool to use, the arguments to pass to it, the expected output file types, and so on.
- In the Program field, specify the path to the executable file of the tool (.exe, .cmd, .bat, or other depending on the specific tool).
- To use the program filename instead of its full path, add the path to its folder to the system environment variable PATH.
- On Windows, you can skip the .com, .exe, .cmd or .bat extension.
- To use a jar archive, specify the absolute path to it. Alternatively, to use a relative path, add its parent folder to the IntelliJ IDEA path variables on the Appearance & Behavior | Path Variables page of the Settings/PreferencesCtrl+Alt+S.
- In the Arguments field, define the arguments to pass to the tool.Arguments are usually specified using macros, for example,
$FileName$
or$FileNameWithoutExtension$
, that will be replaced with actual file names.Type the macros manually or click and select the relevant pattern fom the list in the Macros dialog that opens.When specifying the arguments, follow these rules:- Use spaces as separators.
- Epic download for mac. If an argument contains spaces, enclose them or the entire argument in double quotes:
some' 'arg
or'some arg'
. - If an argument contains double quotes, use backslashes to escape them:
-Dmy.prop='quoted_value'
.
- In the Output paths to refresh field, specify the files where the tool stores its output: the resulting source code, source maps, and dependencies. Based on these settings, IntelliJ IDEA recognizes the files generated through compilation.Note, that changing the value in the Output paths to refresh field does not make the tool store its output in another place. If you still need to do that, specify the desired custom output location in the Arguments field: type the output paths with colons as separators and use macros.Output paths are usually specified using macros. Type the path manually or click and select the relevant pattern from the list.
- Expand the Working Directory and Environment Variables hidden area.
- Define the environment variables. For example, specify the
PATH
variable for the tools that are required for starting the tool you are configuring but are not referenced in the path to it. In most cases it is Node.js or ruby.exe. Such situation may result from custom manual installation instead of installation through the Node Package Manager (npm) or gem manager. - In the Working Directory field, specify the directory to which the tool will be applied.
Because the tool is always invoked in the context of a file, the default working directory is the directory of the current file. The default working directory is specified in all predefined templates through a$FileDir$
macros. To specify a custom working directory, type the path to it in the field, or click and select the directory in the Select Path dialog, or click and select the desired macro from the list in the Macros dialog.If you leave the Working Directory field empty, IntelliJ IDEA uses the directory of the file where the File Watcher is invoked.
Configuring advanced options
In the Advanced Options area, customize the default behaviour of the File Watcher.
- Specify the events that will invoke the File Watcher:
- To invoke the File Watcher as soon as any changes are made to the source code, select the Auto-save edited files to trigger the watcher checkbox.
When the checkbox is cleared, the File Watcher starts upon save (File | Save All) or when you move the focus from IntelliJ IDEA (on frame deactivation). - By default, the File Watcher wakes up on any saved change, including the updates received from you version control system when you, for example, check out a branch. To ignore such changes and invoke the File Watcher only when you update your code in IntelliJ IDEA, clear the Trigger the watcher on external changes checkbox.
- Specify whether you want the File Watcher to interact with the IntelliJ IDEA syntax parser:
- When the Trigger watcher regardless of syntax errors checkbox is selected, the File Watcher start regardless of the syntactical correctness of a file. The File Watcher will start upon update, save, or frame deactivation, depending on the status of the Auto-save edited files to trigger the watcher checkbox.
- When the Trigger watcher regardless of syntax errors checkbox is cleared, the File Watcher ignores all triggers in files that are syntactically invalid and starts only in error-free files.
- Use the Create output file from stdout checkbox to specify how you want to generate the output file.
- When the checkbox is selected, IntelliJ IDEA reads the native tool's output
standard output stream (stdout)
and generates the resulting files from it. - When the checkbox is cleared, the tool writes its output directly to the files specified in the Output paths to refresh field.
- In the Show console list, choose when you want the File Watcher to open the console.
- Always: with this option, the console always opens after the tool execution is completed.
- On error: with this option, the console opens after the tool execution only when the
Exit code
is different from0
. - Never: choose this option to suppress opening the console at all.
Showing information reported by File Watcher in the editor
If the tool configured in the File Watcher reports errors or warnings about your code with the links to the files and specific lines, you can see this information right in the editor:
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- In Preferences/Settings | Editor | Inspections, enable the inspection File Watcher Problems.
- In the Output Filters field of the Edit Watcher dialog, describe the format of the output you want to match. Use the macros
$FILE_PATH$
,$LINE$
, and$MESSAGE$
for that. You need to avoid using special symbols like braces and dot with. The text matched with the
$MESSAGE$
macro will be shown in the editor.
Example
The tool reports errors in the following format:
ERROR: /Users/Alice/WebstormProjects/angular-app/src/main.ts[6, 27]: ' should be '
Use the following regex as an output filter to see the error highlighted in the editor: ERROR: $FILE_PATH$[$LINE$, $COLUMN$]: $MESSAGE$
You can also use the Output filter to make paths in the watcher’s output clickable.
Saving, enabling and disabling File Watchers
Once you’ve saved the new File Watcher, you can decide if it’s going to be available only in the current project (select Project from the Level list) or for all projects (select Global).
- To enable or disable a File Watcher, open the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, go to Tools | File Watchers, and select or clear the checkbox next to it.When a File Watcher is enabled, it starts automatically as soon as a file of the selected type and in the selected scope is changed or saved, see Configuring advanced options.If an error occurs while a File Watcher is running, the File Watcher is automatically disabled. To restore the status, enable the File Watcher manually.
Enabling global File Watchers for new projects
Global File Watchers can be automatically enabled in all new projects that you create in the future.
- Open the Settings for New Projects dialog (File | New Projects Settings | Settings for New Projects) , go to Tools | File Watchers, and select the checkboxes next to the required File Watchers.
- Alternatively, on the Welcome Screen, select Settings from the Configure list. In the dialog that opens, select the checkboxes next to the relevant File Watchers.
Troubleshooting File Watchers
There might be a red error message next to the File Watcher in the list in Preferences/Settings | Tools | File Watchers.
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Here is a list of possible errors:
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Reported Problem | Problem Description | Workaround |
---|---|---|
Unknown Scope error | The File Watcher uses a scope that is not defined in this project. | Double-click the watcher and select an available scope or create a new one. |
Not found error | The project uses a global File Watcher that was removed. | Delete the watcher from the list using the Remove button or edit it to create a new global watcher with the same name. |
IntelliJ IDEA runs numerous identical File Watcher tasks | After a bulk update, for example, from your VCS, IntelliJ IDEA runs a separate File Watcher task for each saved file. | Add a file-specific macro (like &FileNameWithoutExtension& ) in the Arguments field, see Configuring interaction with the external tool. |