What is in your toolbox (chapter 1: IDEs)?
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Additionally, Eclipse still lacks some very basic features like code folding (works only for a method as a whole, not for single blocks like if/for/switch/etc.). The dock windows are always in the way when you need much space and they are missing when you need them (one can get SO accustomed to the ESC-key-pattern of Creator...). Code completion is miserably slow sometimes (waiting some seconds before the UI is responsive again) and some more. And instead of fixing those basic things they bloat it with a bunch of new features. It's simply not my beast :-)
Regarding MSVS - a bit better, but still no ESC key that moves the unneeded dock windows out of the way :-)
XCode ... clutters my screen with uncountable toplevel windows for every source file. Else, not bad.
Codewarrior - I'd better stop writing now :-)
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- Qt Creator for C++/Qt [this is my main tool nowdays]
- Netbeans for Java/SWING
Platforms: Mac OS X [main nowdays], Windows, Ubuntu, Debian.
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Just vi, qmake and make :)
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[quote author="deni-herdiman" date="1294488427"]Just vi, qmake and make :)[/quote]
Give Qt Creator a shot - it has a "fake vi" mode for the editor and you gain the additional goodies like refactoring, inline help, jump to definition/declaration, code completion and the like and just calls qmake and make under the hoods. It's really worth a try!
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[quote author="Volker" date="1294494339"]... it has a "fake vi" mode for the editor ...[/quote]
?
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You can have the shortcuts of vi or emacs inside QtCreator.
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[quote author="Gerolf" date="1294498950"]You can have the shortcuts of vi or emacs inside QtCreator.[/quote]
This is what Volker meant with his last post?
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and window where you see yours code looks like vi :) it's nice tool :)
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Stavros, "fake vi" mode means the editor has key bindings (navigation, insert, delete, etc.) like the famous vi editor.
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[quote author="Volker" date="1294513865"]Stavros, "fake vi" mode means the editor has key bindings (navigation, insert, delete, etc.) like the famous vi editor.[/quote]
:)
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Qt Creator for Qt development and Eclipse for Java (just for university courses since I don't like java at all). Compilers are GCC on both linux and Windows
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[quote author="deni-herdiman" date="1294488427"]Just vi, qmake and make :)[/quote]
Similar here - vim, cmake and make (adg gdb naturally).
As for IDEs, MSVS never agreed with my stomach. Borland tools were ok a long time ago, but rather obsolete today.
The only time when I deviate from Vim is when I want to test the new versions of QtCreator, KDevelop or NetBeans (with nbVi plugin), but still couldn't make any of them my main solution.
For me, KDevelop is main contestant to the throne at the moment.
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only QT creator. ;-)