if you can spend some money, and do a lot of multi-language programming
[sort of a definition of web stuff, what], Visual SlickEdit is slick.
it's not an IDE, just a Very Good editor.  there is a trial download
at www.slickedit.com .  you have to do some tweaking to get it to
recognize the java stuff distinct from javascript [syntax similarities
seem to get in the way]; but they tell me that an update is due
soon.  they have said in the past that more extensive support for JSP
is due, so it might be in this next update.

[rest of my group does use Forte Community Edition.  for jsp/servlets
a good editor is enough.]

robert young


On Wednesday, February 16, 2000 05:58, Fernando Ribeiro [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
wrote:
> It will take some time till we get something like Microsoft Visual
> Interdev, a full-feature IDE for ASP, but do not forget: text editors
> have been our best friends for years :-)
>
> See ya
>
> fribeiro
>
> Scott Stirling wrote:
> >
> > Just learned this today--I've been using my own vim syntax file for JSPs for
> > a while now, but I was editing a JSP on a machine today that I knew didn't
> > have my syntax file, but I noticed the JSP file extension was recognized by
> > vim and the syntax was highlighted.  I looked at the syntax files and sure
> > enough, VIM 5.6 has a JSP syntax file.  I like mine better, but, hey . .
> >
> > Another tool that has a JSP "mode" is Forte from Sun/Netbeans.  I was
> > exploring that on Linux today.  The Community edition has a JSP template.  I
> > didn't get far with it though, as the JVM segfaulted and died right after I
> > selected the JSP template.  So it goes with Java GUIs . . .

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