I had the problem with the Never Register button not getting
remembered between restarts too.  The ~/.netbeans-registration/6.5
folder had files with ownership set to root instead of my user.  A
chown command was enough to fix that.

I found that one very annoying too, and I was amazed that that issue
slipped through testing (especially since 6.0.1 didn't have that
problem), but at least there's an easy workaround.  Maybe I should
have filed a bug report, but I assumed that one was obvious enough
that it would have already been filed.  I should really know
better. :)

I didn't see the segfault you got though.  My MacBook Pro is a model
with a Core 2 Duo... no trouble launching or running NetBeans here
(other than the Register button thing).  But I've been using it more
to play with JavaFX than with Java so far... but at least I'm trying
to expand my horizons beyond just Eclipse. :)

Keith

On Jan 30, 9:33 pm, Tor Norbye <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Jan 30, 2:43 pm, Reinier Zwitserloot <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Even after the obscure segmentation fault I mentioned in another
> > thread, netbeans is unusable on mac os x. I don't understand why the
> > posse sings netbeans' praises so, especially considering that most of
> > them have macs.
>
> > here's a list of things that bugged the hell out of me in the first 2
> > minutes:
>
> >  - the install isn't mac-like. It creates a directory in /Applications
> > and then puts in a single .app file in there. Why not just dump this
> > in /Applications directly? That's what every other mac app does. Not a
> > show stopper, but shows lack of trying on the mac platform.
>
> >  - Nothing is remembered. Everytime I boot netbeans, it'll ask me to
> > register. I can click 'never register' until I'm blue in the face. No
> > luck. This is a show stopper.
>
> >  - hg isn't shipped with mac os x, and it isn't in netbeans either.
> > Why not? It's open source. Python's already there, at least on os x
> > leopard, so it can't be that hard. Even if you do install hg, netbeans
> > can't find it. You have to manually go to the terminal, create
> > a .MacOSX dir in your home file, and then an environment.plist, add /
> > usr/local/bin there, and *LOG IN AGAIN*. Even technical users
> > shouldn't be subjected to that kind of abuse.
>
> > When your product takes over an hour to get working properly, you're
> > doing it wrong.
>
> > Verdict: Netbeans on mac is a toy project.
>
> Hey now - concluding that it's only a toy project based on these
> observations is a bit premature.
>
> First of all, your comment that Mac applications should install
> directly into /Applications rather than in a directory under
> Applications. I agree that would be a good thing, but NetBeans is by
> no means alone in this.  In my /Applications I have a folder for Adobe
> (containing only Acrobat), and there's a folder named "iWork 08" from
> Apple (with Pages and Numbers inside), and there's a Python folder
> (containing IDE, Python Launcher, etc). These are all adding a folder
> rather than just an .app because they are installing multiple
> components.  In my NetBeans folder I have NetBeans (a couple of
> versions actually), as well as an install of Apache Tomcat, and an
> install of Glassfish.
>
> By the way, speaking of being Mac like - check out the new Mac look of
> NetBeans in 7.0 daily builds:http://blogs.sun.com/stan/resource/laf/nbdev.png
>
> Next, your comment that "hg isn't shipped with mac os x, and it isn't
> in netbeans either. Why not? It's open source.".  I'm not sure
> NetBeans should be in the business of distributing hg. It would also
> have to install Python for you since hg depends on it.  In any case,
> I'm not sure why NetBeans didn't find hg for you.  I have hg in my /
> usr/local/bin, and NetBeans found it without any problems - I didn't
> have to do any of the plist, login/logout stuff you're describing. You
> -do- have /usr/local/bin in your $PATH, right?
>
> I have no idea why you keep getting the registration screen. It
> doesn't happen for me, and if it was happening to everybody I'm sure
> we would be run over by bug reports. In other words, the problem isn't
> global, and it would be great if you could file a bug report to find
> out what's going on in your case. It's supposed to store a flag in
> your userdir recording your preference.
>
> Eric, you shouldn't have to go to the File view to create a new
> folder. Just do New (on a package in the Projects view for example, or
> from File > New), and then choose "Folder" from the "Other"
> category.     I'm not sure what you mean by importing files into a
> folder (import what from where? just a file copy? just drag & drop
> from folder A to folder B), but if you gave up using the tool just
> based on this I'd encourage you to look a little deeper - most of the
> benefits in the IDE is not going to be its file manipulation
> capabilities, but refactoring, quickfixes, profiling, gui building,
> etc etc etc.
>
> -- Tor
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