The Gradle plugin from GitHub works quite well:

https://github.com/kelemen/netbeans-gradle-project

Am 03.06.2018 um 05:04 schrieb * William:
Also NO  Gradle

that splats the Mobile niche too.

On Friday, 1 June 2018, Karl <karl.ranse...@justmail.de 
<mailto:karl.ranse...@justmail.de>> wrote:
 > No offense, but what use is a Java IDE in 2018 without support for web 
applications?
 >
 > If that is Oracle's secret plan to kill NetBeans by making it unusable for 
professional development, it's working.
 >
 > Is there at least a time frame on why Oracle wants to donate that? (If they 
actually pan to do that)
 >
 > Karl
 >
 > Am 30.05.2018 um 18:40 schrieb Geertjan Wielenga:
 >
> Not in 9.0, which is focused on Java SE only. All the JavaScript features (and Java EE, PHP, Groovy, C/C++) must still be donated to Apache by Oracle.
 > Gj
 >
 > On Wednesday, May 30, 2018, Mark A. Claassen <mclaas...@ocie.net 
<mailto:mclaas...@ocie.net>> wrote:
 >>
>> I have an Angular application that works just fine running “ng serve” from the command line.  What is the best way to run this project  in netbeans?  I found some things on the internet, but they seem out of date or not quite what I want.  Can I run this as a Node.js application and with the correct project properties, have netbeans run “ng serve”?
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >> Thanks!
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >> Mark Claassen
 >>
 >> Senior Software Engineer

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