Sebastian Hennebrueder wrote:Maven repositories as a common way to store open source artifactsas are Ant-based projectsand is easier to manage using Maven.Depends.I've seen Maven projects that were a complete cock-up to manage.Ant or Maven, the biggest issues I've encountered involved obfuscation of dependency chains.Maven build projects can be easily imported into any IDE (Eclipse, Netbeans, IntelliJ)As can Ant-based projects.If I want to work on the project, I can be up an running in seconds by checking out and importing a Maven project into my IDEDitto Ant-based.without the need to understand the details of a Ant buildI am always deeply dubious of any argument that touts "without the need to understand" as a virtue. This dubiety has yet to disappoint.and excluding paths to be considered as source code.Sorry, but that is necessary to Maven-based projects, too.-- LewHoni soit qui mal y pense.http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cf/Friz.jpg-- Sent via pgsql-jdbc mailing list (pgsql-jdbc@postgresql.org)To make changes to your subscription:http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-jdbc
Maven repositories as a common way to store open source artifacts
and is easier to manage using Maven.
Maven build projects can be easily imported into any IDE (Eclipse, Netbeans, IntelliJ)
If I want to work on the project, I can be up an running in seconds by checking out and importing a Maven project into my IDE
without the need to understand the details of a Ant build
and excluding paths to be considered as source code.
pgsql-jdbc by date:
Соглашаюсь с условиями обработки персональных данных