Any Open source Ada(latest, 2012) IDE? [closed] - ide

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I am trying to use Ada for Automotive programming to take advantages of Safety critical abilities of the language. I only saw commercial licenses for the development tools from (Libre, GNAT programming studio).
Are there any free Ada IDE's?

GPS and Emacs (ada-mode) are both licensed under the GPL, but that doesn’t matter because you won’t be delivering them to your users. They are both environments that enable you to run a compiler and associated tools.
If you need to deliver your software certified by an independent authority, you’ll likely be paying them a lot more than any support contract you got from AdaCore, and they'll likely want you to have more tool support than you get with AdaCore’s GPL toolset.
But if you don’t have certification or support issues, then you can use GPS or Emacs with a compiler of your choice:
if you’re able to release your software under the GPL, you can use AdaCore’s GNAT GPL compiler;
if not, you can use an FSF GCC Ada compiler.

Some of the options are GNAT GPS and Emacs.

The nearest solution to the requirement described by you seems to be located here:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/ideada/
I am not sure of the version of ADA supported by the app though.

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Qt5: Qt Linguist redistributable [closed]

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I'm writing a manual for translators and can't find an easy and official way of Qt Linguist editor distribution. It looks like you can get it for Linux by downloading qttools5-dev-tools package. But for other systems?
Qt5 online installer doesn't seems to provide a separate Linguist component to download and I'm not sure if it's a part of QtCreator component. It's not feasible to force translators to install whole Qt framework bundle or even IDE to get it. I expected to find some Qt5 libraries redistributable+ Qt Linguist app + manuals in one package, but don't see any on qt.io.
Any recommendations?
This site has standalone Qt Linguist installers for Windows & macOS
https://github.com/lelegard/qtlinguist-installers/releases

On which platforms has ANTLR 4.7 been tested? [closed]

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I need to know if ANTLR version 4.7 has been tested and verified on Windows 10. Is there any way to know if it supports Windows 10 without having to build the ANTLR code and run the tests myself?
ANTLR is written in Java and should run on any version of Windows, Linux or Mac that has a recent version of Java installed.
Therefore, "proof" can be performed in three steps, not necessary on the same system:
Check which versions of Java are compatible with ANTLR 4.7. As per documentation, Java 1.6 should be compatible.
Check that compatible version of Java runs on Windows 10. As per documentation, Java was certified on Windows 10 starting with Java 8 Update 51
Check that the target system has a compatible version on Java installed.
I am assuming that OP does not need to recompile ANTLR tool (parser generator) itself so he/she can use the pre-built JAR. If this is not the case, ANTLR tool can also be rebuild on another system.

Where to find documentation on earlier version of GDB? [closed]

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Where to find documentation on earlier version of GDB? The documentation located at http://sourceware.org/gdb/documentation/ is for current version only.
I am specifically looking for the document "Debugging with gdb" for GDB version 7.3.1. The document currently available at http://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb/ is not preferable, since it is for later GDB version 7.5.50.20121217.
At my workplace, we are using GDB 7.3.1, and hence this need.
Thanks.
At my workplace, we are using GDB 7.3.1, and hence this need.
Download the 7.3.1 tar ball, and (these may need to be adjusted, typing them from memory):
cd gdb-7.3.1
./configure
cd gdb/doc
make html

Mylyn equivalent for Netbeans? [closed]

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A co-worker has been going on about how cool Mylyn is for Eclipse. I want to give a task management tool a try but I use Netbeans. Is there a Mylyn like plugin for Netbeans? Preferable with integration to Redmine or Trac?
I switched over from Eclipse to Netbeans a year ago and during that time I have not found a good alternative to Mylyn. Even the latest dev builds of Cubeon do not come close. Despite Netbeans being a very good IDE, having Mylyn context management is essential to me. I have just posted a topic on the Netbeans forum discussing this issue and attempting to illustrate the importance of a Mylyn alternative. If this is important to anybody reading this then I suggest you leave a post in this thread:
http://forums.netbeans.org/viewtopic.php?t=27871
I think discussing this in the Forum is the best option at this time. Until the Netbeans community is convinced of the importance of Mylyn, any official feature request is doomed to fail.
Edit: There is now a feature request for this. If you would like to see this implemented then please vote here: http://code.google.com/p/cubeon/issues/detail?id=135
Have a look at Cube'n, which is a Trac plugin for Netbeans. I haven't used it (yet), but it has offline support, and some drag/drop integration with the task view, and support for custom trac workflows.
(Disclosure: I am the creator of NBTaskFocus)
Now there is a plugin for Task-focused development (like Mylyn in Eclipse) in NetBeans IDE. Visit the NBTaskFocus project at NBTaskFocus project page on Java.net
This project currently provides local task repository only, but with automatic task context maintenance using the open editor windows and also a Project Context panel to see the files in focused context.
I've used cubeon for couple of hours. The current latest version 1.2.01. is works fine on Netbeans 7.2. It can connect Trac servcer without any obstacle.
The UI of cubeon is little bit difficult to use. Main reason is that you should link a query to a folder with Synchronize Function to categories tasks. Also the filtering options hide under a drop down menu. It needs more mouse click than MyLyn in Eclipse. Any you can manage issues on Trac with this tool.

Resources for Basic Unix System Administration (OSX) [closed]

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After, reading and understanding Dan Benjamin's post about installing Ruby, Rails, etc. on OSX (Leopard), I really jumped at using usr/local, maybe at my peril and without understanding it fully. I've had no problem running Rails on my local machine, but I still feel like I don't quite wrap my head around these basic sysadmin practices.
As an example, when I run which git the path my git installation is running from is /usr/local/git/bin/git -- does that seem right?
I've learned the bulk of my programming thanks to JavaScript, and I haven't really had to go deeply under the hood of the Mac, but I'm very anxious to use these command line tools and scripts.
Can you recommend a good resource for documentation on basic Unix system administration for beginners (preferably for the Mac-set)?
I realize this might not be totally programming related, but I believe basic shell and command-line scripting knowledge is pretty crucial and I'd like to feel confident moving forward.
For improving your basic shell and command-line scripting knowledge, you don't need to get into sysadmin tasks. The nearest source of information (though not the most friendly at first) is the man command. Try man bash or man intro. Start by writing small shell script utilities.
About your question on git installation, you can install anything anywhere. But recommended directories are /usr/local/bin and /opt/bin for system-wide tools and ~/bin for your private tools. Usually tools create their own subdirectory in recommended directories where they put doc and resources, such as your /usr/local/git.
For online resources, I assume that you already know how to find the Apple web site and how to use Google.