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We're creating a new project in IntelliJ and must have something wrong because when we right click on a directory, select New and then get the context menu, Java based options are not shown. Currently get things like File, some HTML options, XML options.

We have assumed so far it's something we haven't configured correctly in the Project/Module configuration. The new module we are talking about is part of a multi module project. We created it using a Maven web archetype.

Any help configuring the project nature?

Edit: The answer is basic: 'That moment when you realise somethings not working because you haven't been clicking 'Apply'... :) We had a good laugh at ourselves when we discovered this'

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  • 5
    In my case package name was invalid. int.project.mypackage. int is not allowed in package name.
    – Not a bug
    Dec 8, 2018 at 7:55

13 Answers 13

459

The directory or one of the parent directories must be marked as Source Root (In this case, it appears in blue).

If this is not the case, right click your root source directory -> Mark As -> Source Root.

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  • 15
    If it is your test directory, mark it as the Test Source Root (it will appear in green) Sep 17, 2013 at 14:25
  • 1
    'Mark Directory As' is not available in the menu of my version of Android, version 2.1. Any workarounds ?
    – CHarris
    Jun 26, 2016 at 23:32
  • 5
    Also, intellj-idea automatically recognize folder as source root when we have structure in such way: src/main/java
    – zkvarz
    Nov 2, 2016 at 14:26
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    IntelliJ makes some really questionable design decisions.
    – SpacePrez
    Sep 19, 2017 at 19:15
  • Very useful 👍🏼
    – vijayraj34
    Oct 8, 2021 at 12:05
78

This can also happen if your package name is invalid.

For example, if your "package" is com.my-company (which is not a valid Java package name due to the dash), IntelliJ will prevent you from creating a Java Class in that package.

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    This... this worked. Changed the dash to an underscore and it worked immediately. Oct 24, 2017 at 2:48
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    I had named a package Enum and that was my issue
    – Arun Gowda
    Sep 6, 2020 at 7:12
  • 1
    package name cannot contain a reserved keyword. Something like com.example.package is not valid nor com.example.class.
    – jebeaudet
    Oct 13, 2021 at 16:24
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    This really helped me, I replaced dash with underscore and solved the problem. Feb 24, 2022 at 12:07
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    Thanks a lot! My package was called "enum" and it works after I changed it to "type".
    – Chen Ni
    Apr 21, 2022 at 11:36
21

you need to mark your directory as source root (right click on the parent directory)

and then compile the plugin (it is important )

as result you will be able to add classes and more

enter image description here

enter image description here

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7

If you open your module settings (F4) you can nominate which paths contain 'source'. Intellij will then mark these directories in blue and allow you to add classes etc.

In a similar fashion you can highlight test directories for unit tests.

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7

Project Structure->Modules->{Your Module}->Sources->{Click the folder named java in src/main}->click the blue button which img is a blue folder,then you should see the right box contains new item(Source Folders).All be done;

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    Thanks! this worked. For newbies searching for Project Structure, you can find it from File menu or press Ctrl+Alt+Shift+S in windows.
    – jacobcs
    Jan 14, 2018 at 0:40
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I will share another interesting point. If you try to create a package with the reserved keyword then it will be treated as a normal directory and not a package. I was having this issue where I was creating a package named import and it was converting that to a directory.

A sample of mine

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Another possible solution is that the project name is not acceptable. For example, creating a project with spaces in the name does not block the project creation but the proper sources are not marked and when those are marked manually, I still was unable to create classes. Recreating the project with hyphens (-) instead of spaces corrected the problem for me.

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Had this issue too. Invalidating Caches/Restart did the trick for me. Please upvote so the the IntelliJ folks take this more seriously. This gives the IDE a terrible UI/UX experience.

https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-203100

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    It's 2024 and invalidating the cache and restarting still sometimes does the trick. 😭
    – Freddie
    Jan 13 at 23:37
  • Just ran into this on 2023.3 and invalidating cache and restart was the only fix. Tried refreshing gradle, repairing IntelliJ, restarting. Nothing worked except a invalidate cache and restart.
    – JM_24
    Jan 30 at 20:52
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Make sure you are not creating a package name which is same as predefined keywords in java like enum, int, long etc.

In my case I was trying to create a class under "enum" package. As soon as I changed package name to "enums" I was able to create class in it.

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You need to mark your java directory as Source Root ,

  1. Right Click on Java directory
  2. Select Mark Directory as option and click on the sub menu option Source Root

Mark Java directory as Source root

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There is another case where 'Java Class' don't show, maybe some reserved words exist in the package name, for example:

com.liuyong.package.case

com.liuyong.import.package

It's the same reason as @kuporific 's answer: the package name is invalid.

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  • Hi Liu Yong. As you say, this is the same reason mentioned in another answer. If you believe that answer could be improved perhaps you can either edit it, or add your reply as a comment on that answer.
    – Crowie
    Jan 30, 2023 at 14:33
  • As a result, could I please ask you to delete this answer as IMO it is a duplicate answer
    – Crowie
    Jan 30, 2023 at 14:34
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If you just created your project, let IntelliJ finish indexing your project.

-1

Most of the people already gave the answer but this one is just for making someone's life easier.

TL;DR

Screenshot of how to add test sources

You must add the test folder as source.

  1. Right click on java directory under test
  2. Mark it as Tests
  3. Add src/test/java in Test Source Folders

Thats it, IntelliJ will consider them as test source.

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  • Does this answer respond to the question or answer something else?
    – Crowie
    Jan 21, 2021 at 9:27
  • Manoj I'm sure your answer has some substance, but could you add some words to describe what you are trying to communicate in the picture. I cannot immediately see what you are trying to say with the picture.
    – Crowie
    Jan 28, 2021 at 10:37
  • Hi Manoj, the edits look good but, & I could be mistaken, this is an expansion of an existing answer. You are free to edit the previously existing answer. I do like how yours has turned out but as a principle the moderators of this site try to avoid duplication of work (a key computer science goal except I guess in the cloud 😅)
    – Crowie
    Jan 30, 2023 at 14:36
  • As the answer looks like a duplicate I'll need to flag it for closing but I do recommend adding your formatting and image edits to the leading answer as I do think they look good and are an addition. That is, even if the content is a duplicate, the effort could help and be redeemed in other locations
    – Crowie
    Jan 30, 2023 at 14:43
  • Hi Manoj, Ive had a think overnight and I think your answer could be instead an edit to the original answer. I like the visual approach. If I get time I'l try to come back and do the edit myself to preserve your work. Thank you for your contributions.
    – Crowie
    Jan 31, 2023 at 14:40

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