That frood Rich Payne sassed:

> 
> If you're into C, you can try Glade which is the GNOME gui
> designer. Though I'd say it's important that you take a look through the
> GTK/Gnome docs to undertand it. I'm sure KDE has a similar thing
> (Kdevelop?).
> 
> Also, Borland/Inprise/Borland are going to releae Kylix (I've heard) to
> the GNOME foundation.

There is also a VB-like IDE for Linux IIRC...  I can't remember any
details but someone on this list pointed me to it so maybe they'll
pipe up and post a pointer.

Worth mentioning that those development tools that Rich mentions above
are NOT all-inclusive like MS Developer Studio, and are
widget-toolkit-specific.  IOW, you can't use Glade to develop KDE
apps, etc. and you still need a source code editor and debugger.

The vi editor is a great editor, but if you're looking for integrated
compliling/debugging/source control, emacs/xemacs (Like Ken, I prefer
Xemacs) is definitely the way to go.  It's definitely not like any of
the windows tools though, and there definitely will be a learning
curve.  There are numerous books out there that will get you going,
O'Reilly's ubiquitous _Learning_GNU_Emacs_ and SAMS
_Teach_yourself_Emacs_in_24_hrs_ among them. Surprisingly (unlike many
of the other SAMS books), I have the latter and actually like it.


-- 
We sometimes catch a window, a glimpse of what's beyond
Was it just imagination stringing us along?
---------------------------------------------------
Derek Martin          |   Unix/Linux geek
[EMAIL PROTECTED]    |   GnuPG Key ID: 0x81CFE75D
Retrieve my public key at http://pgp.mit.edu


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