Again, I�d like to recomend for evaluation Pramati Studio 2, with a JPDA
debugger, support for JSP compilation,
EJB support + wizards, Home & Remote interfaces wizard, a built in J2EE full
complaint server & facilities to make as
many packages as you want... The descriptor generation is completely
commanded via a nice GUI, which enables non-veterans
to speed up the learning curve; It's also quite fast in low memory machines
and has an API for add-in, which makes it as
extensible as NetBeans/Forte

Licences are about $1180 per seat with one year support, and let me tell you
this is unrated support in the industry...
I get responses(with solutions in them!!!) within 24 hours.

This is a small company from India, and I'd choose them over the 'Big' names
every day of the week and twice on sundays

My 2c,

JP

PS: I don�t work for Pramati

-----Original Message-----
From: Jason Boehle [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Lunes, 11 de Diciembre de 2000 12:05
To: Orion-Interest
Subject: RE: Off topic: development tools


JBuilder 4 is quite nice.  Visual Cafe crashes all the time, I *definitely*
cannot recommend it.  JDeveloper is based off of JBuilder, but not the 4.0
version, so I probably couldn't recommend using that either.  All that being
said, I use a combination of 3 tools: Visual SlickEdit for editing, Ant for
building/packaging, and Karmira BugSeeker for debugging.  I've found that
Karmira will support whatever distributed debugging needs you have by using
remote debugging, and it's really quite a nice debugger, particularly for
the cost of only $200US.  As far as validation to the EJB specs (I assume
you mean generating the deployment descriptors), I really don't have much
experience in that arena, as I have been hand-coding all of mine so far.

Jason Boehle
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

>  -----Original Message-----
> From:         Jarek Skreta [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
> Sent: Monday, December 11, 2000 5:03 AM
> To:   Orion-Interest
> Subject:      Off topic: development tools
> 
> Hello everybody,
> 
> I am in the process of selecting an IDE for developing J2EE applications
> on Orion. I would appreciate any advice on the subject. I've noticed from
> emails that JBuilder is quite popular. Other contenders that I know off
> are: Visual Caf�, JDeveloper (Oracle flavour of JBuilder), public domain
> tools like Ant, etc.
> 
> The features I am mainly interested in are: ability to develop for
> different Apps Servers, visual debugging, validation of conformance with
> specifications (e.g. for EJBs). 
> 
> I will be grateful for your comments and recommendations.
> 
> Thanks,
> Jarek Skreta
> 
> 

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