Eclipse also has a nice c++ plugin.
Richard Welty wrote:
>On Mon, 17 Nov 2003 23:48:46 +0000 (GMT) jini us <jiniusuk@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:
>
>
>>Java has long way to catch up with C++
>>in my opinion.
>>
>>
>
>perhaps. this is neither the time nor the place for that discussion.
>
>however, in answer to the actual discussion in this thread,
>netbeans (not javabeans) is a nice pseudo open-source
>IDE (no charge, and it's open source to the extent that the
>Sun Public Licence is open source, which is to say sort of
>but not really).
>
>see http://www.netbeans.org/ for a copy, but be sure that your
>development system has enough RAM -- and you'll want to
>watch the netbeans users list for performance tips, as there
>are a lot of tweaks to the default memory management parameters
>that are worth making.
>
>it happens to have a C++ module which can be downloaded
>and added; i've played with it a bit. only downside is that the
>runtime and debugger aren't really integrated; i find myself
>editing C++, saving it, and going to a shell window to run
>the makefile, which isn't nearly as slick as when i do java
>development in the IDE.
>
>richard
>
>
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