I want to program in Java and would like something that works like StyleCop in Visual Studio.
Does anyone know about something like that?
I use the eclipse-cs Checkstyle plug-in. There are other tools, such as FindBugs, but I think Checkstyle is the easiest and fastest. And of course, you can configure Eclipse to be less lenient.
Related
Hi I wonder if anyone knows of any plugin for IntelliJ with similar functions that ObjectAid has for Eclipse. I'm working on the JabRef project and need some UML tool. The suggestion I have gotten is to use ObjectAid with Eclipse however I would much rather use IntelliJ.
Thanks for any help!
I usually use Eclipse but I'll need to work with Netbeans for a while since I'm starting a JavaFX project.
I can't fathom having to re-map every single shortcut and setting. Is there a tool somewhere that can import Eclipse settings for me?
This might help:
http://wiki.netbeans.org/EclipseToNetBeans
Does anyone know of free tools, IDEs or plugins (preferably for Netbeans or Eclipse) that can generate dependency trees like NDepend for Visual Studio? I am looking for one that does it for PHP, but ideally it would support multiple languages.
I believe that doxygen can be coaxed into doing something similar.
Here is is: GENERATE_TREEVIEW.
I am completelty new to the BB development.
I want to start development of BlackBerry application.
I am confused how to start? And what plugins have to download and from which link?
And bit confused about the JDE plugin <--> Java plugin for Eclipse
Which I have to download for development?
Can any one explaine the above things?
thanks in advance...
JDE and eclipse plugin are same other than, JDE has only debug mode, but the eclipse has both debug and run mode. I am using eclipse for several years, so I feel comfortable in using eclipse. I recommend eclipse because, it is more developer friendly when compared to JDE.
I agree with Karthikeyan that eclipse has a more feature rich environment plus it can incorporate other plugins such as cvs, svn, mysql etc.
Sometimes it can take more configuration to get everything set up right properly. If you want to get your code up and running quickly without any configuration, I would highly recommend using the JDE.
Glen
I am experimenting with Groovy Griffon development and I am wondering what IDE to use.
I am trying to use NetBeans 6.5, and I found this post
https://blogs.oracle.com/geertjan/entry/notes_on_converting_netbeans_grails
essentially it describes forking the NetBeans trunk and hacking the Grails support; I was hoping for something more lightweight.
Are there any simple tools to create eclipse, netbeans or pom.xml's from Griffin Apps?
Or is it best to use a simple text editor?
There is a NetBeans Griffon plugin already available at http://plugins.netbeans.org/PluginPortal/faces/PluginDetailPage.jsp?pluginid=18664
Griffon apps have some rudimentry hooks already for IDE integration.
First, a .classpath and .project file are generated that mark the expected source and test directories for Eclipse. Both IntelliJ and NetBeans have importers for these eclipse files (and they work, I use them regularly).
Second, Griffon 0.1.1 adds more targets to the parallel build.xml so that more of the common scripts can be used as though they were ant tasks (run-app, compile, debug-app, etc.)
Third, there is some better IDE support in the works form some of the IDE vendors. As mentioned in the article you linked because Griffon is grails derived it is fairly easy to re-purpose existing Grails support. IntelliJ has the only specific tracked feature request I am aware of.
IntelliJ Idea has very good Griffon support.
This question usually comes with a next question:
How to debug Griffon?
Just in case someone still requires a helping hand trying to figure out how to debug Griffon in Eclipse/STS I've written a simple step by step guide to get it done:
http://ivo43.blogspot.com/2012/02/debugging-griffon-in-eclipsests.html
Hope it helps someone someday, :D
PD: I've tried Netbeans and even though it looks great am still with STS, call me a maniac!