Netbeans has a vi plugin.  YAY!

On Tue, Jul 10, 2012 at 9:42 AM, Eric Cope <eric.cope@gmail.com> wrote:
If we are throwing out editors, I highly recommend Sublime Text 2. It is very fast, is incredibly good looking. Its not FOSS, but somethings are worth it :)

Eric

<prepares for flame war :)>

On Tue, Jul 10, 2012 at 9:32 AM, Carruth, Rusty <Rusty.Carruth@smartstoragesys.com> wrote:

Call me a <whatever>, but I like the kitchen sink editor.  Which is to say ‘emacs’.  You can even use it as something of an IDE, if you wish.  (And it has syntax highlighting, all that sort of stuff).  To compile, just ‘Macro-x compile’ (IIRC, and I think I do), then you can visit each error/warning, edit, and go to the next.  It will keep track of your line insertions and deletions such that it will go to the next error correctly.  If you have the x-enabled version, once your focus is inside the compilation output window, you even have buttons for ‘goto next error’, ‘recompile’, etc.

 

Others love VI/VIM/VI<whatever>.  But let’s not get into a flame war over kitchen sinks vs VI ;-)

 

Or one of the IDEs you mention might work also.  But beware – my (very limitd) experience with eclipse is that it makes the kitchen sink editor look small J

 

Um, you are using ubuntu?  Isn’t the plugin there in synaptic?  Yeah, there it is – eclipse-cdt.  So: “sudo apt-get install eclipse-cdt” if you don’t want to use synaptic.  (I’ve not used eclipse on linux, so I have no idea if eclipse-cdt will work with g++, but I’d be a bit surprised if it didn’t)

 

Rusty

 

 

From: plug-discuss-bounces@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us [mailto:plug-discuss-bounces@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us] On Behalf Of Stephen
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2012 9:18 AM
To: Main PLUG discussion list
Subject: Re: g++

 

For windows i like notepad ++ light context highlights and tabs. Very basic for sure but i really like it. Just wish i had a Linux port.

PS: And remember:
If you have any question,
you will get any answer...


Trent Shipley writes:

I have obtained the g++ package.  I have obtained Eclipse, which seems to have a C++ plug-in.

Is there a good, recent gcc|g++ book I can read? Failing that is there a way to get the documentation on my tablet (perhaps a PDF)?
How do I get the plug-in for Eclipse?
How do I integrate g++ and Eclipse?
(You can see that I'm angling for an IDE.  If I can't get the IDE to work it's back to Microsoft.)

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