I've got a Linux box with 2 network cards. One network card is connected to
a cable modem. An Apache server handles HTML requests through the first
network card. The other network card is configured for IP masquerading (SP?)
and connects to a hub. I have 2 Windows (Don't stone me!) machines (95 and
98) which are also connected to the hub to give me a private local area
network in my office. On the Linux machine, I use Samba to share out the
Linux disks to my Windows machines. This give me the ability to use Windows
based Java development tools, but use the Linux machine as the target. Given
this configuration, I have the best of both worlds. I've been using Borlands
JBuilder2 product but am a little disappointed in it. Perhaps I'll give the
Symantec's Visual Cafe a try. Does this product support JDK1.2 with regard
to using the latest swing components?
Steve Delahunty
Mullion Communications
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-----Original Message-----
From: Kirk Hutchinson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, December 21, 1998 10:06 PM
To: linux java
Subject: Re: An IDE for C and JAVA
First of all, XEmacs is not an IDE. It's a code editor - that's it.
It's really too bad that more IDEs are not available for Linux.
Personally, I favor Symantec's Visual Cafe over any other Java IDE,
but it's not available for Linux. I remember seeing an ad for a
product called "NetBeans", or something like that, that was a real
IDE, and it was written in Java - so theoretically it could run on
Linux. I tried it on NT, but it was too slow for my taste. But,
it may be worth looking into if you REALLY want to develop Java on
Linux.
Kirk
Ugo Cei wrote:
>
> Pierre Bizzotto wrote:
> >
> > Hi, I need an IDE for C and Java, if it's possible for XWINDOWS or KDE.
>
> Use Emacs and JDE, it's best in the long run.
--
Kirk Hutchinson, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Electrical & Software Engineer, Cabletron Systems
What good is unused science?