Programming program

Gabriel Dragffy gabe at dragffy.com
Sat May 12 19:10:19 UTC 2007


On Sun, 2007-05-13 at 22:58 +1000, James Gray wrote:
> On 13/05/2007, at 8:06 PM, TP Städ Akut - Tomas Forsman wrote:
> 
> > Itś about LinuxDC++, what program should i use to work with the  
> > source?
> >
> > In Windows we use Visual Studio 2003 or 2005. Is there something like
> > that in Linux too? So i can start 1 program and change stuff and  
> > see how
> > the code is linked to other places in source?
> >
> > Or those who makes LinuxDC++ is making that under Windows envirement?
> 
> Eclipse or Kdevelop spring to mind.  Eclipse is a Java-based multi  
> language IDE with CVS and SVN hooks along with an extensive plugin  
> and extension library.  Kdevelop is a KDE-base multi language IDE  
> with all manner of gizmos and gadgets hooked into it.  Personally, I  
> use Kdevelop more than anything else, but that's because I do more  
> KDE/Qt development than anything else too.  YMMV and usual  
> disclaimers apply :)
> 
> IMHO - neither Eclipse or Kdevelop are a pinch on the modern IDE's  
> from the commercial software vendors (such as Visual Studio from MS,  
> or even Xcode from Apple).  But they are both worth serious  
> consideration for any serious coding project on Linux.
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> James

Not sure if it a helpful suggestion: but there is also a program called
"Anjuta" on Ubuntu. Or you can install the package "gnome-devel" to get
Anjuta, Bluefish, Glade installed etc.
-- 
Gabriel Dragffy FdA BA(hons)


Websites by Gabe:
http://dragffy.com
http://andrew-norman.com






More information about the ubuntu-users mailing list