Symantec Visual Cafe 3.0 supports any JDK version ( Including Java 2  and the
latest Swing components ) through a JVM plugin interface. This version also
supports remote debugging
with any Sun compliant JVM.
PS: I'm using this version right now on my current project.

Cheers
Chris

Steve Delahunty wrote:

> 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?

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