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Java Programming

Apache NetBeans 10.0 Now Available (apache.org) 38

The Apache Software Foundation has released NetBeans 10.0, the second major release of the Apache NetBeans IDE. The release, said the Apache Software Foundation, is focused in adding support for JDK 11, JUnit 5, PHP, JavaScript and Groovy, as well in solving many issues. From a blog post: JDK 11 support has been enhanced in the following ways: Integration with the nb-javac project, adding support for JDK 11, removed the CORBA modules, support for JEP 309, Dynamic Class-File Constants, support for JEP 323, Local-Variable Syntax for Lambda Parameters, and support for LVTI Support for Lamdba Parameters.

PHP 7.3: You can now add trailing commas in function calls under PHP 7.3 (mailing list thread), and also use the list reference assignment, the flexible Heredoc and Nowdoc Syntaxes are also supported. [...] And more: context sensitive lexer, PHPStan support, debugger, twig, hints, suggestions, code completionâ¦â visit PHP Features Page and NetBeans 10 New and Noteworthy for more details on PHP support. JUnit 5.3.1 has been added as a new Library to NetBeans, so you can quickly add it to your Java projects. For Maven projects without no existing tests, JUnit 5 is now the default JUnit version.

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Apache NetBeans 10.0 Now Available

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  • I know about lambda parameters but it looks like now I need to read up and lamdba parameters. Sigh.
    • It doesn't look like there's any real change if you're already using lambda expressions. Java 10 hasn't been out long enough for most people to absorb those changes (which is what this modification to lambdas is about) so you can probably just continue on as usual.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Still can't make a good IDE.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Blows eclipse out of the godamned water.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Eclipse isn't much competition, IMO. Now, if you had thought IntelliJ IDEA was the apt comparison, that would be a lot more interesting.

  • by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Friday December 28, 2018 @12:36PM (#57871408) Journal

    Netbeans 8.2 remains the best C++ ide I have ever used. Nothing else has come close, in my experience.

    Given that they never supported C++ properly with Netbeans 9 (you could make it work, by using 8.2 plugins, to be fair, but it's far less complete than it was in 8.2), I expect that they probably never will with 10 either.

    • I'm curious? What others have you tried and what in your opinion makes Netbeans better?
      • by mark-t ( 151149 )

        What makes Netbeans better is the ability to import freeform projects with C++ code and its own Makefile, and Netbeans does not attempt to try to dictate what must be in this makefile. You just tell the IDE what rule to use to build your project, and identify the target executable and everything's good to go.

        As for other IDEs, I've use Eclipse fairly etensively, and also tried out Visual Studio Code and CLion.

    • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Friday December 28, 2018 @03:20PM (#57872360)

      I used 8.x for a while as well for my C++ projects. I'd say it was probably the best among the free IDEs I've tried on Linux.

      I've recently been moving my projects to CMake, as I was tired of maintaining multiple projects by hand, or rebuilding a project from scratch if I switch tools. Unfortunately, it doesn't seem to have a generator for Netbeans projects, so I've switched to Code::Blocks. It's a solid second choice that covers all the basics pretty well.

      I guess it's not surprising that no one has bothered with a CMake generator for Netbeans seeing as how C++ support appears to be a fairly low priority for Apache. I can't really blame them for that, as with limited developers, you have to pick your battles.

  • by iampiti ( 1059688 ) on Friday December 28, 2018 @12:47PM (#57871484)
    As a long time user of Netbeans I was very saddened when Oracle decided to stop pouring money into it. A project of this size IMO needs financial support of a big company to stay competitive with the rest of the field. I'm afraid Netbeans won't be able to stay competitive with others IDE with backing from big (or just commercially interested) companies i.e.: Visual Studio, Eclipse, IDEA, etc.
    In addition, because of licensing reasons it currently lacks many plugins/features that were available in the times of 8.2. I hope most can return
  • Removing or leaving CORBA in seems like a dud feature. It's been 20 years since I did anything with CORBA. Does anyone still use CORBA?

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