[PLUG-Devel] IDE

Paul Mooring drpppr242 at gmail.com
Fri Jul 9 10:53:06 MST 2010


I used geany for C/C++ I don't known if it's considered a full IDE or
not it can compile, debug, and run software but known auto-complete or
project functionality like eclipse or netbeans. It's a great middle
ground between gedit and eclipse I think

On 7/7/10, Kevin Bowling <kevin.bowling at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 6, 2010 at 9:37 PM, Joseph Sinclair <plug-devel at stcaz.net>
> wrote:
>> I have used many IDE's (but not xcode, I don't use Mac).
>> I generally prefer Netbeans for most development, I like it's interface
>> and it's simple and fast compared to Eclipse.
>> Eclipse is not too bad for C++ (but it's often horribly unstable on Linux
>> due to bad "plugins").
>> Both Eclipse and Netbeans are cross-platform and written in Java.
>>  Netbeans is dual-licensed CDDL and GPL v2; Eclipse has it's own
>> Open-Source license.
>
> Indeed, it depends a lot on the language you plan to write in.
>
> I like Eclipse for Java and it can be extended to work well with many
> languages, bug trackers, version control, etc. but it has a fairly
> rigid project model that might take getting used to for a vi convert.
> The Netbeans Swing UI throws me for a loop but it looks like it has
> otherwise very good implementation.  Both of these are very good for
> common languages you might use to implement web applications.
>
>> For Linux users, there are some nice native tools as well.
>>  MonoDevelop is not too bad if you want to develop C# or VB.Net code.
>>  KDevelop is nice for QT/KDE development.
>>  Code::Blocks (codeblocks) is a good very-simple IDE, a good transition
>> from vi for C/C++ coding.
>
> If you want a nice C++ environment that just works, Qt Creator is
> really clean.  It works on Mac, Windows, and Linux and contains the
> excellent Qt library for making C++ GUI apps.  KDevelop has the best
> C++ introspection and autocompletion I've seen but they are in the
> midst of a toolkit transition and it lacks a bit of polish.
>
>>
>> steve young wrote:
>>> I'm an old school programmer and have used vi.
>
> Don't be too quick discount vi, you might be impressed with gvim to
> add just a bit to what you are already used to.  Kate and gedit can
> perform similar light weight roles.  I prefer Kate to an IDE when
> programming in C.
>
> Regards,
> Kevin
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