In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Duncan Gibson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I was afraid that someone would say something like this, and it is > the code refactoring that I'm really after, along with automake and > doxygen support. After playing around with kdevelop 3.5.2 for the I think the only real alternative for decent code refactory is, sadly, Eclipse. It's an incredibly complicated task. I've seen dedicated tools for Java, but not for general c/c++. > I haven't had time yet to really get into a project with it to see > how much difference it could make to productivity. From what I have > seen so far, kdevelop 3.5.2 is, er, quirky, and 4 is still in alpha. AFAIK, there's the possibility of using KVim inside KDevelop as an embedded component. > PS. At home I'm using Lunar Linux (http://www.lunar-linux.org) on a > three-year old system that isn't the most powerful box in the world. > As far as I can see, the other IDEs easily available on Lunar would > be Eclipse, anjuta and Code::Blocks. The first one is just too slow > on my system. I don't know about the others. Try them all, if you have the chance. Productivity is really subjective and task specific. My general yardstick I usually use to measure the quality of an IDE is the space left for the editor itself on the screen during the various tasks and how well the integrated debugger works. _______________________________________________ fltk mailing list [email protected] http://lists.easysw.com/mailman/listinfo/fltk

