![]() ![]() ![]() It was impossible to move around the archipelago Eclipse because classroom machines did not have enough resources to move this mastodon. Same with some archaic version of VisualAge that also was one of the hardest things I’ve had the chance to try. JBuilder was dying and all versions that I could access were outdated. But everything was going to happen much faster.įorté for Java by Sun ironically went as fast as it came. Next step was Gel which I thought it was the best of the best. I discovered a graphic tool called Kawa that was nice because it was simple. Suddenly I discovered some all-in-one tools which did “everything» inside called IDEs. With Windows XP I already was used to copy and paste, and to switching among source code editing, compiling, executing and debugging tasks. In the earlier years of Twenty-first Century I was tired of dealing in Java only with Notepad and DOS command window. Copy and Paste was a lovely novelty and switching between tasks was improving little by little but it wasn’t not enough yet. In later years of Twentieth Century my approaching to Java programming was from Windows 98 using DOS Edit as a source code editor and DOS command line. Despite that, if we pay attention to its evolution, it appears that we will have NetBeans 8.1 with the early months of 2015. Oh yes, but NetBeans 9.0 in January’16 seems too far away. Versionĭue to the amount of the project’s complexity, it is becoming increasingly difficult to round a new version according to a previously planified roadmap.Īt the moment there is no other new mark nearly scheduled in its Release Roadmap. So far it has been the update that has been the slowest to come out. Still alive and more powerful than ever, NetBeans has reached its mark 8.0.1 five months after Oracle decided to boost Java World to the pool blackball‘s number. ![]()
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