java development environment
Hello, What is the good java IDE environment on suse 9.1? How about eclipse? thanks, carl
Carl, On Tuesday 28 December 2004 16:35, eh man wrote:
Hello,
What is the good java IDE environment on suse 9.1? How about eclipse?
Eclipse is available on the SuSE Pro 9.1 (at least) distribution. It certainly is a well-regarded, sophisticated and very widely used Java IDE. If you have it installed, it appears in the KDE menu under "Development -> Integrated Environment -> Eclipse". I use jEdit for extensive Java programming. It is not so much an IDE as it is a highly extensible, customizable and programmable editor (something that is more to my liking). It does not offer as much Java-specific support as Eclipse does, however. If you want to learn more about jEdit, visit http://www.jedit.org/.
thanks,
carl
Randall Schulz
Hello,
What is the good java IDE environment on suse 9.1? How about eclipse? Both Eclipse and NetBeans are good. Both have their string and weak
On Tue, 28 Dec 2004 19:35:25 -0500 (EST)
eh man
On Wed, 2004-12-29 at 09:20 -0500, Jerry Feldman wrote:
On Tue, 28 Dec 2004 19:35:25 -0500 (EST) eh man
wrote: Hello,
What is the good java IDE environment on suse 9.1? How about eclipse? Both Eclipse and NetBeans are good. Both have their string and weak points. I was working on a project where Eclipse had been the recommended tool, but someone else had downloaded netbeans. (http://www.netbeans.org/). After some research, I found that there were some things we needed that were supported by Netbeans and not by Eclipse. personally, I found the Eclipse front end to be a bit more polished, but I found that Netbeans tends to fit into a Unix/Linux environment a bit better.
-- Jerry Feldman
Boston Linux and Unix user group http://www.blu.org PGP key id:C5061EA9 PGP Key fingerprint:053C 73EC 3AC1 5C44 3E14 9245 FB00 3ED5 C506 1EA9
I have found two more that could be useful. Bluej (bluej google will give you the site) Its small and installs easily) and is mostly used by unis etc for teaching java. So if your trying to learn Java it might be worth a try.It finds what it needs to on your system, so no config probs. The other ia Borland JBuilder foundation. This leads you a bit more but is just as easy to install. ( I found it easier to install on suse than winxp)but it is bigger and has some querks.It also has its own java built in so configuration is not a prob. Both these are free but with Borland you do need to register to get a key. Hope this helps. Chris
participants (4)
-
Chris
-
eh man
-
Jerry Feldman
-
Randall R Schulz