On 12.07.2017 16:53, Emilian Bold wrote:
This presentation was awesome!
Thanks.
Had no idea so much work is poured into
the C++ cluster.
We develop C++ cluster as the platform for "Oracle Developmer Studio"

And of course, regardless the parser, getting comments into the AST is
the first challenge for editors :-)

Where is JConverter and Clank hosted?
JConvert is our internal close sourced tool.
Converted Clank sources are hosted internally as well, but jars are propagated as external-libs into $nb_src/libs.clank module under LLVM license.

Vladimir.

--emi


On Wed, Jul 12, 2017 at 1:05 PM, Vladimir Voskresensky
<[email protected]> wrote:
Hello Chris,

Sorry for the late reply, I was on vacation.

On 06.07.2017 15:06, Christian Lenz wrote:
I know NetBeans is ready for C/C++ and I think for C++11, but what is with
C++14 and C++17. Atm I don’t use it, but I saw a blog post about:
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/visualstudio/2017/07/05/7-reasons-to-move-your-cpp-code-to-visual-studio-2017/

So I’m wondering, whether NetBeans can handle it too, or not (C++14 and
C++17)
NetBeans can handle C++ up to C++14.
It supports C++17 at some extent.
(And for a long time it support Remote development)

We are working on Clank now (It is the Java-port of  Clang/LLVM) for
NetBeans 9.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EpFJlARXO74

NB9 will support dbx debugger, clang-format and experimental integration of
static analyzer functionality (which supports c++17 as well, because is
based on Clank).
http://wiki.netbeans.org/NewAndNoteworthyNB9#C.2FC.2B.2B

Hope it helps,
Vladimir.


Regards

Chris


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