Does anyone know how to get a console in netbeans that I can run mvn
scala:cc?
On Apr 10, 8:12 am, David Pollak
wrote:
> I think this thread points out something important about Lift... what
> matters most is what works for you. There are plenty of people on this list
> that use one editor or
I think this thread points out something important about Lift... what
matters most is what works for you. There are plenty of people on this list
that use one editor or another... use mapper or JPA... use lots of
comet/ajax or use very little. The only thing that's right is what works
for you...
I think a lot of people coming to scala from ruby are more familiar
with the terminal and textmate style combination... using large IDE's
with boat loads of features is more for people coming from a
traditional java background. Thats not to say they don't have merit,
of course they do, but I think
well, fwiw :P i eventually chose ideavim with intellij. best of both worlds.
thanks all for the input!
On Thu, Apr 9, 2009 at 10:20 PM, TylerWeir wrote:
>
> It's not an editor/IDE war unless someone brings up Vim or Emacs,
> so...
>
> I've been using Vim+Scala+Ctags since I started.
>
> I'd reco
Can't do them all, but I'd mention Emacs and Vim. Maybe show a slide of
what they look like.
Chas.
TylerWeir wrote:
> It's not an editor/IDE war unless someone brings up Vim or Emacs,
> so...
>
> I've been using Vim+Scala+Ctags since I started.
>
> I'd recommend not getting hung-up on which e
It's not an editor/IDE war unless someone brings up Vim or Emacs,
so...
I've been using Vim+Scala+Ctags since I started.
I'd recommend not getting hung-up on which editor is the "best" just
start coding.
On Apr 9, 3:01 pm, "Charles F. Munat" wrote:
> I was thinking that I'd start with Textma
I was thinking that I'd start with Textmate, since I've used that the
most and it's what most Rails developers use, and then move to NetBeans,
since that seems to be pretty popular. But I could take a quick look at
Eclipse, too.
David Pollak wrote:
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 9, 2009 at 2:38 AM, Alexa
This is interesting. I'll think about this. Thanks.
Chas.
Alexander Kellett wrote:
> actually my biggest blocker (and still my blocker) is getting a
> working coding environment.
>
> there is so much contradictory information on which ide is the best.
> it would be really nice to have a documen
Ah, I get it now.
Jacob Grydholt Jensen wrote:
> No, he is talking about *developers* switching from rails to lift, not
> projects.
>
> /grydholt
>
> >
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> On Thu, Apr 9, 2009 at 9:42 AM, Clemens Oertel > wrote:
>
> I don't think it's necessary to make a final decision about your IDE
> at any time. AFAIK, all major IDEs work quite well with Maven's pom
> files, so it's very easy to switch IDEs at any time.
>
> WOAAAH I beg to differ. Actuall
On Thu, Apr 9, 2009 at 9:42 AM, Clemens Oertel wrote:
>
> I don't think it's necessary to make a final decision about your IDE
> at any time. AFAIK, all major IDEs work quite well with Maven's pom
> files, so it's very easy to switch IDEs at any time.
>
WOAAAH I beg to differ. Actually som
I don't think it's necessary to make a final decision about your IDE
at any time. AFAIK, all major IDEs work quite well with Maven's pom
files, so it's very easy to switch IDEs at any time.
I for instance used NetBeans until last month, when JetBrains updated
their Scala plugin - then I swi
On the contrary... Im coding in TextMate right now: it works perfect!
I run scala:cc in a terminal window and just code away in TextMate. Job
done.
Tim
On 09/04/2009 10:38, "Alexander Kellett" wrote:
> in the rails/osx world its easy: use textmate unless you have a
> predisposition for someth
On Thu, Apr 9, 2009 at 2:38 AM, Alexander Kellett wrote:
>
> actually my biggest blocker (and still my blocker) is getting a
> working coding environment.
>
> there is so much contradictory information on which ide is the best.
> it would be really nice to have a document that talks about the pro
actually my biggest blocker (and still my blocker) is getting a
working coding environment.
there is so much contradictory information on which ide is the best.
it would be really nice to have a document that talks about the pro's
and con's of each ide.
in the rails/osx world its easy: use textm
No, he is talking about *developers* switching from rails to lift, not projects.
/grydholt
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Sorry, but I haven't got a clue what you're talking about.
Chas.
Warren Henning wrote:
> You're proposing to scrap working code?
>
> Isn't that trying to fix something that isn't broken?
>
> Warren
>
> On Wed, Apr 8, 2009 at 8:58 PM, Charles F. Munat wrote:
>> I'm writing a proposal for a pr
You're proposing to scrap working code?
Isn't that trying to fix something that isn't broken?
Warren
On Wed, Apr 8, 2009 at 8:58 PM, Charles F. Munat wrote:
> I'm writing a proposal for a presentation on moving from Rails to Lift.
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