I've had code crashes with Juno. So I just use Atom with syntax 
highlighting for Julia.

Daniel.

On Wednesday, 9 March 2016 12:27:50 UTC+1, Avik Sengupta wrote:
>
> Fair enough. Eclipse is, in many ways, a "buy into the ecosystem" 
> proposition. For many that do, that is the simplest way to work. But if you 
> don't, Juno/Atom is great, and Mike's been hard at work making it better. 
>
> Regards
> -
> Avik
>
> On Tuesday, 8 March 2016 20:22:45 UTC, J Luis wrote:
>>
>> Ok, thanks ... but will wait for a simpler thing to use.
>>
>> terça-feira, 8 de Março de 2016 às 19:32:28 UTC, Avik Sengupta escreveu:
>>>
>>> Use the "Eclipse IDE for Java Developers". That should give you the 
>>> least amount of cruft. 
>>>
>>> Regards
>>> -
>>> Avik
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, 8 March 2016 19:00:22 UTC, J Luis wrote:
>>>>
>>>> A quick previous question. Which Eclipse version from the (many) 
>>>> available options should we install  (Java is completely out of my 
>>>> interest)?
>>>>
>>>> http://www.eclipse.org/downloads/
>>>>
>>>> Thanks
>>>>
>>>> terça-feira, 8 de Março de 2016 às 13:56:39 UTC, Liye zhang escreveu:
>>>>>
>>>>> If you are trying to find an IDE for Julia which is as convenient as 
>>>>> PyDev for python, or RStudio for R, you can test JuliaDT. Thanks for 
>>>>> the authors' excellent work!
>>>>>
>>>>> https://github.com/JuliaComputing/JuliaDT/releases/tag/v0.0.1 
>>>>>
>>>>> More about this software,
>>>>> http://juliacomputing.com/blog/2016/02/06/Eclipse-JuliaDT.html
>>>>>
>>>>

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