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KDE GUI

Final KDevelop 3.0 Alpha Released 23

e8johan writes "The KDevelop team has released the final alpha of KDevelop 3.0 (a.k.a. Gideon) has been released. This third generation of KDevelop looks really promising as it features plug-in editors, many wizards (even for Kicker apps, KControl modules and KIOSlaves). Some of the features that I like best are the support for cross compilation and support for more languages than C/C++. Screenshots are here, more info here, dot.kde article here!"
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Final KDevelop 3.0 Alpha Released

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  • by curious.corn ( 167387 ) on Thursday January 09, 2003 @07:28AM (#5046189)
    I mean, publishing a link to a multiple screenshot page (8)... You must hate their servers ;-)
    • ahh, but it only hit the developers section rather than the front page, so it won't get /.'ed nearly as hard. That is until the next 2 or 3 times this story gets submitted until it finally does reach the front page :-)
  • by Anonymous Coward
    ...3 betas and at least 6 release candidates. That is how KDE release engineering works, right?
    • Would you prefer they release a "final" that's not ready? A final that's buggy/crashy/etc?

      Have patience. You won't die if it takes them X more months to produce a final.

      As a full time user of kdevelop 2, which is a solid, powerful ide, I'm glad they're working on 3 but I'll happily wait until final to move over my projects.

      (The alphas have crashed on me way too much to get any useful work done. Not that I'm griping, gideon is amazing -- and I've done my duty by submitting many bug reports and backtraces.)
    • Yes, that's how it works. You should be happy that they're not making you perform unpaid QA duty.

      The first alpha of Windows was called Windows 95. Then they released a beta called Windows 95 OSR2. First release candidate was Windows 98, followed by a second release candidate called Windows 98SE. Their final release was Windows ME, which sucked so bad that Microsoft is starting the process all over from the beginning with another alpha release called Windows XP.
  • by DrSkwid ( 118965 ) on Thursday January 09, 2003 @09:52AM (#5047054) Journal
    I know QT is cross platform so do you tink that by using XP style screen grabs they have it running in XP?

    If not I would suggest they are trying to mislead.

    Even with a 10 minute search on http://www.kdevelop.org I couldn't find any "supported platforms" information

    I'm not into having Windows look & feel. It's bad enough I have to use it occasionally. Those candy coloured buttons, uggh!

    • by Anonymous Coward
      No. KDE does not run under Windows and probably never will. QT is cross-platform, but KDE is Unix-specific. The Unix/X11-specific things are everywhere, and not segregated into easy-to-replace components, so it would be difficult to get it to run on Windows.

      You might be able to get KDE running under cygwin + XFree86 with the Unix version of QT, but that's not really running under Windows and that's not really very useful. It certainly wouldn't be using MFC or GDI or whatever it is on Windows that draws the XP-style widgets.

      This is well-known. They are not trying to mislead, and you're probably the first person I hear saying "Windows" and "KDE" in the same sentence.

      There is no "supported platforms" page for kdevelop, as it's a KDE program and I imagine it's not doing system-specific things, so it would probably work on any Unix platform where KDE works. You figure out if your platform is supported by downloading and compiling and submitting patches if something breaks. Hint: it will work on any Unix platform you'll be using soon, since I'm guessing from your post that you don't admin AIX/HPUX/Irix/other esoteric Unices.

      The theme is gaudy and in poor taste, yes.

    • I'm not into having Windows look & feel. It's bad enough I have to use it occasionally. Those candy coloured buttons, uggh!

      So change the theme of KDE/Gnome/Windowmaker/whatever you're using. How #$%^#&^ hard is that?

      Sheesh...

      • unbunch your knickers mate

        enlightenment btw.

        • You're the one complaining about something that takes seconds to change....Who's the real idiot here, "mate"? :)

          No big deal, really, seeing baseless complaints about the (changeable) Windows look and feel of some Linux apps gets annoying after a while, though.

          That's all :)
          • learn to read

            I'll summarise

            1. I don't think it's right selling your development tool for Linux using the Windows XP window decorations.

            2. The Windows XP decorations are ugly

            now shush
    • "Some of the features that I like best are the support for cross compilation..."

      GCC can cross compile to win32, just buy the full Qt version and hack away!

      • I guess I didn't get that, but if I did it was really scary...
        Er, what exactly did you say?

        Qt compiled to win32?
        HOW, WHAT, WHY, WHEN, tell me us about it!

        • The commersial Qt version can run on Win32. If you have the dll you would (perhaps, maybe, haven't tried) be able to compile your exes using gcc in cross compilation mode from kdevelop, thus develop win32 apps in a linux environment...

          I guess that this means that there are very few excuses for running win32 as a developer (besides propretary tools and evil managers...)

Over the shoulder supervision is more a need of the manager than the programming task.

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