mine does not
gat
Diego Ramiro Gomez Deck wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I want to know if any Linux port support native threads.
>
> TIA,
> Diego.class
> "Matt" == Matt Zagni <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Matt> Hi, Could someone recommend a good editing tool for java
Matt> that will run in linux for constucting classes and applets
Matt> etc.
Dare I mention Xemacs with the jde package? Its what I use.
Barry
> "Franz" == Franz Reitinger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Franz> Developing Java-apps with Emacs is a fine thing. However
Franz> source files may increase and sooner or later you will
Franz> loose the overall view. Therefore a thing like SNIFF in
Franz> conjunction with Emacs
> Date: Wed, 03 Jun 1998 08:42:33 -0400
> From: Paul Houle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Matt> Could someone recommend a good editing tool for java that will run in
Matt> linux for constucting classes and applets etc.
Paul> I reccomend vi, but many people think emacs is a good editor.
Well, this is some
> [...]
> Well, this is something I hear all the time and I'm sorry but I
> disagree. Emacs is not an editor, it's more a way of life; editing
> is just one of the things it does better than anything else.
>
> :-)
>
> One a more useful note, as someone else mentioned, emacs together with
> Jav
Hi Franz,
take a look at Jacob:
http://mats.gmd.de/clemens/jacob/
It might be exactly what you are looking for.
Cu,
Clemens
> From: Franz Reitinger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: Wed, 3 Jun 1998 14:35:10 +0200
>
> Developing Java-apps with Emacs is a fine thing. However source files
> may i
Man, the web site sure has been down a long time.
Novare is willing to service it and have already reserved www.javalinux.org.
If someone can give me hook-ups on the files we will take action.
E
--
___
Ean Schuessler
Hi,
Could someone recommend a good editing tool for
java that will run in linux for constucting
classes and applets etc.
Many thanks
Matt
Doh! I *knew* there was something I was missing: I
should have read the FAQ. Fixed in five minutes. :)
Thanks, folks.
Az. >-)=
Stephen Wynne wrote:
>
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Azazel writes:
>
> Help? I've installed jdk1.1.5-v7 under Redhat 5.1 and all
> of a sudden (it was
Hello to all. I am using JDK1.1.5v7 for Linux, and
JDK1.1.6 for WindowsNT 4.0. I got the app below
to compile in Windows, but not in Linux. Some-
times a window pops up, other times nothing
happens(but cpu usage is around 95%).
I am running Glibc-2.0.7, with X 3.3.2.2.
Any ideas or possible s
Developing Java-apps with Emacs is a fine thing. However source files
may increase and sooner or later you will loose the overall view.
Therefore a thing like SNIFF in conjunction with Emacs or Emacs & a
classbrowser would make java-developement easier.
Does somebody use such nice tools?
Tank
On "06/03/98", "Carlos Cassino" wrote:
>
>Hi Bob.
>
>It does make sense a CPU usage around 95% since you
>enter an infinite loop in your main thread: while (1==1);
>Have you tried to just delete this line?
>
>Regards,
>-- Cassino
Thank you very much sir. It is always easier to
find a bug if som
>Hi,
>
>Could someone recommend a good editing tool for
>java that will run in linux for constucting
>classes and applets etc.
>
>Many thanks
>
> Matt
I reccomend vi, but many people think emacs is a good editor.
I know this may not be the best place but hopefully some one has had this
problem.
I just installed jdk-1.1.5-7 and to do this I upgraded my glibc
to glibc-2.0.7-13.i386.rpm. and then installed which is fine.
I test it out it works.
now for the problem when I use ppp. my only means of connecti
Can someone help please?
I am relatively new to linux, but I kind of have to use it for my project.
I downloaded the jdk1.1.5v7 from blackdown.org. and did not find any
instructions as to how to install it on a Linux system (Redhat 5.0)
1) there were two different things there one was glibc and
Can someone help please?
I am relatively new to linux, but I kind of have to use it for my project.
I downloaded the jdk1.1.5v7 from blackdown.org. and did not find any
instructions as to how to install it on a Linux system (Redhat 5.0)
1) there were two different things there one was glibc and
This is just me being a wuss, but... I tolerate using Sun's Java Workshop
2.0. When I was developing on WinNT and Solaris 2.6 (Intel), I liked having
some degree of conformity in my development environments. It's also fairly
easy to manage big projects with JWS. I'm junking Solaris in favor of
Lin
You need glibc.
In addition you will set your env variables in your .bash_profile
like:
CLASSPATH=~/java/swingall.jar:.:~/java/classes.zip
export CLASSPATH
Should work after that! I just moved to Java Dev on Linux and it beats NT
hands down!
Brett
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-Original Message
I still recommend the JDE included in BISS-AWT. Currently at version 0.94.
Available from the Java-Linux mirrors.
--
> Von: Matt Zagni <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> An: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Betreff: Is there a linux java editing tool
> Datum: Mittwoch, 3. Juni 1998 11:44
>
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