C++ IDE

yueyu lin popeyelin at gmail.com
Thu Dec 13 19:22:23 UTC 2007


>From my point of view, eclipse/netbeans is good enough and fast enough to
act as a powerful java IDE.
If they're used as C IDE, the biggest problem is that they can't integrate
GDB well.
So if you're willing to use GDB often, I suggest you to use Emacs+GDB+Xref.

On Dec 13, 2007 6:34 AM, Derek Broughton <news at pointerstop.ca> wrote:

> Joris Dobbelsteen wrote:
>
> > If you like to go anywhere, eclipse is pretty nice and has a very wide
> > support for languages (including C/C++) and platforms
> (Linux/BSD/Windows).
> > Also everything is nicely integrated, including very decent debugger
> > support.
> >
> > A slight downside is that it easily takes 200 MB of memory (what is not
> a
> > problem on modern systems). Its build in Java, which is both its
> greatest
> > strength and its greatest weakness.
>
> That last pretty much sums up my feelings for Eclipse too.  I use it for
> Java, C, Perl & Python - with varying degrees of appreciation - and
> generally I like it, but (a) it's ugly, like every Java app; and (b) it's
> slow, like every Java app.  This, even though, it uses it's own windowing
> toolkit that is generally faster and cleaner than Java's.  Still, I keep
> using it...
> --
> derek
>
>
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-- 
--
Yueyu Lin
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