307

Does IntelliJ have an Organize Imports feature similar to that in Eclipse? What I have is a Java file with multiple classes missing their imports. Example:

package com.test;
public class Foo {
    public Map map;
    public JTable table;
}

In Eclipse I could use Organize Imports and it would automatically import both java.util.Map and javax.swing.JTable. In IntelliJ I have to individually go to each class, select it, then press Alt-Enter. There is an Optimize Imports feature but all it seems to do is sort and expand the existing imports.

I'm using IntelliJ 10.5.

3
  • 20
    I still cannot find an alternative to eclipse's Ctrl+Shift+O
    – appbootup
    Mar 5, 2013 at 15:38
  • 18
    Have you tried Ctrl + Alt + O? It automatically adds any unique imports and prompts you to choose between similar imports by pressing Alt + Enter. FYI, I'm using IntelliJ 12. Mar 8, 2013 at 13:19
  • 6
    Except Ctrl + Alt + O won't return an import that it cannot decide on... For instance, if there are multiple imports to choose from (which I'm trying to figure out how to choose them, as I don't have the character symbol they suggest on my keyboard), then it will say, "Unused import not found".
    – Azurespot
    Apr 27, 2015 at 7:30

17 Answers 17

441

Ctrl + Alt + O (Code → Optimize Imports...) is what you're looking for, both on Windows/Linux and macOS keymaps.

It says "Optimize", but, if configured to do so, it will also:

  • organize existing imports
  • remove unneeded imports
  • add new required imports
  • add unambiguous imports on the fly

You can tune the auto-import settings under "Settings → Editor → General → Auto Import" as described by Dave.

You can also modify how the imports are auto-ordered under "Settings → Editor → Code Style → Java → Imports"

11
  • 18
    I keep getting transitory downvotes, probably due to confusion. I've updated my answer to explain how this does satisfy the original question. Jun 14, 2013 at 0:54
  • 5
    It does not work when package-names in a dependency have changed. Even when it is still unambiguous I have to click the ClassName hit Alt+Enter and Enter, for each affected class...
    – Superole
    Nov 21, 2013 at 12:12
  • 7
    On Mac it is CTRL + ALT + O as well (at least in Android Studio 1.0)
    – jlapoutre
    Jan 5, 2015 at 19:21
  • 10
    I find it quite stupid that the option "add unambiguous imports on the fly" is not checked by default. Who does prefer to make this by himself, class by class?
    – toni07
    Feb 12, 2015 at 10:51
  • 3
    Should be Settings → Editor → General → Auto Import? Mar 29, 2017 at 19:35
111

Under "Settings -> Editor -> General -> Auto Import" there are several options regarding automatic imports. Only unambiguous imports may be added automatically; this is one of the options.

5
  • Not enough up-votes for this answer. Yes, @ryan-stewart's answer fully answer's the OP's question, but this answer provides the solution to the question the OP didn't ask: how do I fix this forever, not just how do I fix it this one time. May 13, 2016 at 20:27
  • 7
    It's now Setting > Editor -> General > Auto Import
    – Lucky
    Sep 13, 2016 at 14:29
  • I fixed that adding the check on classes Oct 29, 2017 at 18:56
  • it doesn't work on package/folder/project level, does it? I did a 'ctrl + alt + o' on project, src, java and did mvn clean test ... i still got 'symbol not found' for recent refactor.
    – old-monk
    Jul 5, 2018 at 17:52
  • @old-monk It works with what the editor knows about; it's more likely something in the refactor is broken, but impossible to say. Jul 5, 2018 at 18:47
50

Simple & short solution worked for me.

Go to File -> Settings -> Editor -> Auto Import -> Java (left panel) and make the below things: Select check box for "Add unambigious imports on the fly" and "Optimize imports on the fly"

Refer this.

enter image description here

1
  • it doesn't work on package/folder/project level, does it? I did a 'ctrl + alt + o' on project, src, java and did mvn clean test ... i still got 'symbol not found' for recent refactor.
    – old-monk
    Jul 5, 2018 at 17:52
46

In addition to Optimize Imports and Auto Import, which were pointed out by @dave-newton and @ryan-stewart in earlier answers, go to:

  • IDEA <= 13: File menu > Settings > Code Style > Java > Imports
  • IDEA >= 14: File menu > Settings > Editor > Code Style > Java > Imports (thanks to @mathias-bader for the hint!) Settings dialog

There you can fine tune the grouping and order or imports, "Class count to use import with '*'", etc.

Note:
since IDEA 13 you can configure the project default settings from the IDEA "start page": Configure > Project defaults > Settings > .... Then every new project will have those default settings: enter image description here

3
  • 7
    Since IntelliJ IDEA 14, this can be found under Settings > Editor > Code Style > Java > Imports Jan 12, 2015 at 8:29
  • @mathias-bader thanks for pointing out the "settings" pages change
    – t0r0X
    May 18, 2015 at 9:45
  • 1
    Kudos for the screen shots! Love it. A visual is worth 1,000 words!
    – atom88
    Jan 25, 2017 at 20:06
45

July 2015 - I have concluded that IntelliJ does not support automatically resolving imports with a single function. "Organize imports" simply removes unused imports, it does not resolve unimported types. Control-Space resolves a single unimported type. There does not exist a single action to resolve all types' imports.

5
  • 13
    This has been my experience. Frustrating.
    – ayahuasca
    Jan 7, 2016 at 16:00
  • 1
    This also tripped me up. See @rohit's solution below. File -> Settings -> Editor -> General -> Auto Import -> Java and check all three options that he has highlighted. This worked for me. Mar 24, 2016 at 16:34
  • 1
    Odd that this is the accepted answer, as it's highly inaccurate. See stackoverflow.com/a/8609200/839646. Dec 6, 2016 at 6:48
  • 2
    @RyanStewart it doesn't resolve ambiguous imports the same way Eclipse does. Eclipse will prompt when it's ambiguous, IntelliJ just ignore it.
    – Steve Kuo
    Apr 12, 2017 at 18:21
  • I had the sam frustration, however, @Ryan is correct. CTRL ALT O , can add the missing imports. But you have to configure it in Setting > Editor -> General > Auto Import, and check "Add unambigous imports on the fly" Then resolves all imports in a class.
    – razvang
    Sep 2, 2021 at 6:51
9

navigate to the file where you want to organize imports or just click on the whole package or even click on the project than press CTRL + ALT + O

1
  • 2
    This answer already exists. You could consider adding the extra info ("you can click on the whole package or even click on the project than press CTRL + ALT + O") as a comment to that answer Aug 7, 2013 at 18:59
9

In IntelliJ 14, the path to the settings for Auto Import has changed. The path is

IntelliJ IDEA->Preferences->Editor->General->Auto Import

then follow the instructions above, clicking Add unambiguous imports on the fly

I can't imagine why this wouldn't be set by default.

7

Shortcut for the Mac: (ctrl + opt + o)

2
  • 1
    No, Its control + option + o Apr 25, 2015 at 20:36
  • Acctually this answer is the same keys as the one most voted in this question. Apr 25, 2015 at 20:37
3

Goto Help -> Find Action (Short Cut for this is Cntl + Shift + A) and type Optimize imports (Short cut for this is Cntl + Alt + O)

2

Just move your mouse over the missing view and hit keys on windows ALT + ENTER

2

ALT+ENTER was far from eclipse habit ,in IDEA for me mouse over did not work , so in setting>IDESetting>Keymap>Show intention actions and quick-fixes I changed it to mouse left click , It did not support mouse over! but mouse left click was OK and closest to my intention.

2

That plugin will automatically do the "organize import" action on file save: https://github.com/dubreuia/intellij-plugin-save-actions.

To install: "File > Settings > Plugins > Browse repositories... > Search 'Save Actions' > Category 'Code tools'". Then activate the "organize import" save action.

3
  • Judging a tool on one (missing) feature might not be considered as a thoughtful judgment. If the plugin do not work, do not hesitate to fill a bug there: github.com/dubreuia/intellij-plugin-save-actions/issues. Jun 4, 2015 at 13:45
  • 6
    You are right, it is not a thoughtful judgment in normal situations. It is - however - a vented frustration on a stunningly missing basic feature from an ultimate tool. I spent 2 hours in agony trying to get this simple, essential feature to work, without success. And what made it worse, rather than been a built in feature by default (like how elegantly Eclipse does it) a plugin really needed to be written to achieve that! Its like building the a state of the art and most complex jumbo jet but without air-conditioning, instead, each passenger is given a paper fan! It took me 1 sec in Eclipse.
    – DhafirNz
    Jun 4, 2015 at 19:03
  • 1
    Actually, using this plug-in highlighted a problem and weakness in IntelliJ. I had to disable this plug-in because it hijacks IntelliJ on every auto-save, rendering it unusable and slow. This is because it tries to do all the save actions every I type something. If auto save can be turned off somehow then this plug-in will indeed be very useful.
    – DhafirNz
    Jun 5, 2015 at 0:00
2

I finally created a workaround around this frustrating issue. I'm not completely happy with the workaround, but it's better than nothing.

Basically, after you paste the source code and unambigous imports are fixed, just press F2 to highlight the next compiler error. If the current error is an import-missing error, press Alt+Enter, then Enter to select the Import option, then pick the correct import. Then, press F2 again.

0

If you are missing just one import (the class name has red underline), click and hover the mouse over it, and a blue suggested import statement will appear. If you hit, Alt + Enter at this point, the import will be included in the file and the red underline should disappear.

1
  • Pretty sure this is a multi-platform feature Aug 7, 2013 at 18:57
0

Shortcut on Android Studio on MacOS: Control + Option + O

0

I did not have any wildcard * as mentioned in one of the answers, neither did any of the formatting through Android Studio mentioned worked

What helped was running this:

./gradlew ktlintFormat
0

IntelliJ offers a shortcut to Optimize imports[ref], on macOS it is ⌥ Option ⇧ Shift ↩ Enter


But for any reason if the shortcut doesn't work for you, then you can re-order your existing imports by deliberately adding an unused import and then using the Optimize imports option in the popup hint

popup hint to 'Optimize imports'


Also see

  1. Is it possible for intellij to organize imports the same way as in Eclipse?
  2. How to optimize imports automatically after each save in IntelliJ IDEA
  3. IntelliJ: Never use wildcard imports
  4. Automatically refactor wildcard imports into explicit imports in IntelliJ (for Scala/Java)

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