IDE Question 2005-08-18 - By Sang Shin
Back Jeroen Wenting wrote:
> Personally I'm a big JBuilder fan but sadly Borland has announced that > development will cease after the next version and everything after that will > be based on Eclipse (they'll effectively be trying to sell Eclipse, pretty > much like IBM is doing with WSAD). > Eclipse, while decent, doesn't get anywhere near JBuilder in functionality > and ease of use. > Netbeans is a step down from that, plus being terribly slow (and in my > experience unstable as well).
I am not sure which version of NetBeans you were talking about. (The old NetBeans 3.x certainly fits your description.)
But NetBeans 4.1 runs as fast as any IDE both in terms of runtime and startup time. And it is very stable.
By the way, for folks who are learning Struts, I created a few Struts hands-on labs using NetBeans as following. Please feel free to try them.
http://www.javapassion.com/tmp/j2ee5daycourse.html#Day4
-Sang Shin
> Then there's of course IDEA, supposed to be an excellent product. > > As to price, it's all relative. > If for example your effort costs $100 an hour and using a $500 product > you're 5 hours more productive a month compared to a free product, the > investment will be earned back in just a month. > > As Frans said, it's a highly personal choice that noone can make for you > (something IT departments finally seem to be figuring out as more and more > seem willing to let people choose their own tools). > > -- --Original Message-- -- > From: A mailing list for Java(tm) 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition > [mailto:J2EE-INTEREST@(protected)]On Behalf Of Frans Verhoef > Sent: vrijdag 8 juli 2005 3:03 > To: J2EE-INTEREST@(protected) > Subject: Re: IDE Question > > > As far as I know the 2 major java IDEs at the moment are Eclipse and > Netbeans. I use netbeans myself, which has improved quite a lot over the > years. I kind of like netbeans. I tried Eclipse a few years ago, and then I > did not like it. I am not sure about now. I have also tried in the past > jdeveloper and jbuilder, which I both did not like very much. > > Basically I can just advise you to download all the IDEs and see which one > fits you best. > > Frans > > On Thu, 7 Jul 2005 20:22:06 -0400, Mark Galbreath wrote: > >>Hi alls, >> >> >>As I noted in a previous post, I've been doing C#.NET (VS.NET 2003) >>and PHP (Zend Studio 4.0) work for the past couple of years. What >>are the quality Java IDEs used for Java EE coding? In the past I've >>used Oracle JDeveloper 9.1, Sun Creative Studio 1.0, NetBeans 3.1, >>Eclipse 3.0, Borland JBuilder X, and vim. I didn't like Eclipse, >>but perhaps it's gotten better? I tested JetBrains IDEA and it >>seems very cool, if a bit pricey. I recently signed up for the Sun >>early release program for Creator Studio. My workstation of choice >>is Linux though I have a couple of XP boxes as well. >> >>Without starting the old "my IDE is better than your IDE" thread, >>any recommendations? >> >>tia, >>~mark >> > > > =========================================================================== > To unsubscribe, send email to listserv@(protected) and include in the body > of the message "signoff J2EE-INTEREST". For general help, send email to > listserv@(protected) and include in the body of the message "help".
-- -- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- -- Sang Shin, sang.shin@(protected) http://www.javapassion.com/SangSchedule.html#Bio http://www.javapassion.com/SangSchedule.html (Life is worth living... with Passion!) -- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --
=========================================================================== To unsubscribe, send email to listserv@(protected) and include in the body of the message "signoff J2EE-INTEREST". For general help, send email to listserv@(protected) and include in the body of the message "help".
|
|