AnyJ ( www.netcomputing.de ) is a very versatile IDE. The
current version for Linux is 1.32 I believe, but a 2.0
release is on its way and its going to have some INCREDIBLE
things in it. Of course its free for use under Linux which
is nice, and you can specify a different JDK on a
per-project basis which is also nice. The one thing you do
need is a 1.1.x JRE to launch it with, I would suggest
IBM's. It also supports things like syntax-highlighting,
auto-indentation, intellisense, autocompletion, real-time
java-doc lookup of class/method you are currently working
with, real-time class indexing of your project so your
methods/etc get added to the autocomplete/intellisense
quickly and are ready for use.

Stuff like that, really handy.



On Wed, 02 Feb 2000, Jacob Nikom wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> I tried to install JBuilder on my machine (PIII, RedHat 6.1) but 
> met with such objstacles that I am going to give up on installation.
> 
> First, it started to complain about lack of free space. I looked at
> JBuilder FAQ and newsgroup and found that it cannot be install on the 
> server ( one of the problem is with df command and long device name 
> (two lines instead of one for free space report).
> 
> So, I tried to install it locally. I could not unmount my server (it is 
> automounted), so I went into "single user" Linux mode with only local
> drive available. However, it started to complain about Java virtual 
> machine which it could not find.
> 
> Next I installed JVM on the local drive. It almost started to install,
> but hung after JVM was found and JVM selection was made. After that 
> I went back to the configuration with server but starting from local 
> drive, hoping that it will install it locally and would not complain 
> about server's disk space. No, it did. So, I don't know what should 
> I do next.
> 
> What you would expect from the product which is so difficult to 
> install, especially comparing with installation of other Linux 
> software like Blackdown JDK? Does it make any sense to use it?
> 
> I am looking for graphical Java debugger for small project development
> under Linux. I don't need GUI builder, source code control, etc, but 
> I would prefer simple nice stuff. I am interested in one which can 
> work with Blackdown JDK1.2+ but be easily switched to another JDK. 
> I cannot use VisualAge since they support only 1.1.8. I did not try 
> DDD - soes it work with GNOME? I heard that it works only with KDE.
> 
> What would you recommend?
> 
> Thank you,
> 
> Jacob Nikom
> 
> 
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Riyad Kalla
General Partner, Multimedia & Design
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.transitivesys.com


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