Send me your coding sheets, and I'll have them keypunched for you and
ship the cards back to you the next day.

(And that, my friends, was the state of the art when I began
programming).

Seriously, you can use whatever tools you want to create the files,
and then build them using the ant scripts that the SDK sets up for
you. This is fairly straightforward.

However, you lose all the benefits of Eclipse. I don't think you've
actually encountered the benefits, or you'd not be asking this
particular question, but trust me, there are a ton of benefits. It
took decades for IDEs to get to a point where I was willing to abandon
Emacs, but Eclipse finally reached that point a few releases back.

So I think it would be more productive for you, to identify what
problems you're having with Eclipse, and seek help overcoming them,
rather than toss the baby out with the bathwater.

There are definitely things about Eclipse to trip up newcomers, and
things to trip up power users, and ones to trip up everyone. But the
net total is a huge productivity increase.

I haven't used Netbeans in a long time, so I can't give you a current
comparison there. But Eclipse has a lot more support, and a lot more
tools and facilities integrate with Eclipse. You may also want to work
with Javascript, databases, HTML, XML, networking, revision control,
wikis, bug tracking systems, etc, as well as edit your Java code, so
include those facilities in your comparison.

On Jul 2, 11:04 am, Jokerstud31 <[email protected]> wrote:
> is there any other programs or ways to program with the SDK or the ADT
> other then Eclipse because i am having nothing but troubles with it.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
Groups "Android Developers" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/android-developers?hl=en

Reply via email to