6/17/2023 0 Comments Oracle netbeans![]() I know several people are Kevin Farnham wrote:Īmazingly, strings are a problem throughout so many languages, C, C++, Java, Python. Is Netbeans even used anymore (outside of Oracle or their non-IT customers)? I've download the mocked project and launch the Ananth Raghuraman wrote: I've tried what you have done in your video, but no test was executed. I'll be trying out JBuilder again, even though my internet connection means it will take a night to download. It's as if Sun did that just to get as many people onto NetBeans as they possibly can, and then decided they had accomplished that. NetBeans lost me when they killed off JSE/JSC and moved the functionality to NB, then killed it off. I just don't see how they can't offer the same quality, that is as tightly integrated, but less coupled to their proprietary warez. ![]() Look at the Code Diagram Designer in VS Pro) is good. The UML designer (something most people think Developers don't like to use. The Swing designer is decent, the Visual JSF Designer is good. ADF infests the IDE at several levels, which makes it a pain to develop production applications without fear of including something that can breach a license.Īpart from that, the IDE is very feature complete, and the performance (outside of the start-up time) is good enough for me. They also didn't support PostgreSQL or Firebird. Last time I checked, it didn't support GlassFish, and I'd much rather use an integrated Application Server that mirrors what I'll be deploying to, than WebLogic. ![]() The issue I have with JDeveloper is the complete neglect for 3rd party solutions. Because of that price tag, it was usually marketed chiefly to those who worked with/on Oracle technology. JDeveloper used to have a price tag, so it comes as no surprise that less people know about it. JDeveloper is a better IDE, and has been for a while. Glassfish / BEA Support: NetBeans is well integrated with BEA, even better with Glassfish.This, however, is only relevant, in case Oracle will keep supporting and developing Solaris. DTrace Support: NetBeans has already DTrace support.It isn't as good as Oracle's SQL Developer - but could be easily extended, or even replace by SQL Developer functionality. MySql / Oracle Support: NetBeans comes with good Oracle / MySql support out of the box.Reporting: iReport, the reporting tool for JasperReport is based on Netbeans.It is based on JSR-296 and 295, but could be extended with e.g. Visual Design: NetBeans comes with advanced Swing / UI / DataBinding / DataBase capabilities.Larry Ellison officially committed to Java FX during the Java One 2009 conference. Java FX: NetBeans has already Java FX support (at least a start).Also regarding to Google Trends, NetBeans seems to be far more popular, than JDeveloper. In this poll, from 2,753 voters, 1,191 voted for NetBeans, 1,340 for Eclipse, but only 39 for JDeveloper (plain text editor got 103 votes :-)). Adoption: Netbeans became very popular.The initial footprint is really important for adoption. Footprint: Netbeans 6.7.1 download (with Java EE support and 2 Glassfish versions) is 158 MB big.From strategic point of view, NetBeans would be the better choice: Because Oracle is about to buy Sun, only one of the IDEs will be officially supported in long term. Oracle pushes JDeveloper and Sun NetBeans. Why Oracle Should Continue To Push NetBeans
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