On October 24, 2002 06:33 am, Technoslick wrote:
Another good GUI/IDE is anjuta. It's in the contrib section. I used it a lot 
when I was parallel compiling in Visual C++ and Linux.

> B�la,
>
> Thanks for such a speedy reply!
>
> Here's what I have currently loaded and showing off of the 'Development'
> menu of KDE (MDK 9.0):
>
> Off of 'Development environments'
>
> Glade
> IDLE
>
> Off of 'Tools'
>
> Bug-buddy
> Cervasia (CVS Frontend)
> Gdb
> KBabel (Translation Tool)
> Kbabel - Catalog Manager
> KBabel - Dictionary
> KBugBuster (KDE Bug Management)
> Kdbg
> Kompare (Diff/Patch Frontend)
>
> I have no idea what most of these are for; my guess is that some are for
> developing the KDE environment and others are related to some acts of
> programming (debugging tools.) I do not see KDevelop under any of my
> menu choices, so I must not have picked it when I was choosing what
> packages to install. Am I assuming correctly that by installing that
> program, all necessary applications that support it will be also
> installed, like a dependency?
>
> I will check into Rhide, but would rather stay away from console-level
> management of my programming until I am comfortable with my skills and
> understanding of the creation process. Otherwise, I would be able to use
> the GNU stuff that is so readily available, right?
>
> Is Kylix3 a commercial product that will need to be purchased? I have
> never known Borland to ever give anything away for free. I will do a Web
> search on this, as well.
>
> Thanks, B�la. I have a starting point. If you have any follow-up
> suggestions, or new ideas, please let me know! :-) (You can send that
> via my email address, unless someone else is interested in this?)
>
> T
>
> Bela Markus wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > there are several options.
> >
> > You can use KDEVELOP as a GUI under X, or RHIDE which is a character
> > oriented console IDE, like BORLAND's TURBO C or TURBO PASCAL.
> >
> > Another possibility is BORLAND's KYLIX3 which support C/C++, not only
> > DELPHI/PASCAL.
> >
> > B�la
> >
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "Technoslick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Sent: Thursday, October 24, 2002 2:40 PM
> > Subject: [newbie] GUI-driven Complier/IDE for C/C++
> >
> >>I want to get back into learning to program in C/C++, but want to do so
> >>in Linux. I am a bit comfused about library and program conflicts, so I
> >>am asking anyone with experience in programming within Linux to
> >>recommend the best overall GUI-driven program(s) that would track well
> >>with SAMS books that are referring to M$ Visual C++ in the learning
> >>process. I think text-editor creation and command-line compiling for me
> >>is a "down the road" thing. I have looked through the 8.2 and 9.0
> >>download distribution (3 CD set), but I am not sure of what I am looking
> >>for, or what libraries and supporting apps need to be loaded to get a
> >>complete, working programming environment.
> >>
> >>TIA,
> >>
> >>T
> >
> > -------------------------------------------------------------------------
> >--- ----
> >
> >>Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
> >>Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
> >
> > ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> >
> > Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
> > Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com


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