I have not used Eclipse for many years now. Back when P4's where the hot
thing, NetBeans and Eclipse were so slow that it was a joke. Java apps just
did not run fast at all. I have been using Anjuta and I still use Anjuta 1.5
but the newer versions are real bad by removing all the features I like
almost to the point that Anjuta is little more then gedit.

So maybe Eclipse is do for another look. On the site eclipse.org I find
versions for Java,  PHP and for C/C++ developers.

Is there one version of Eclipse that works for all? This web site does not
explain much about that. That was a feature I liked about the old Anjuta, I
could open all my source files with it. The new Anjuta thinks it is being
smart by deciding for me that I would rather use other IDE's and tries to
open different source files in any of a dozen other editores that suck just
as bad as the new Anjuta.

I need an IDE that lets me use a black background with colurfull syntax. I
hacked the Anjuta 1.5 syntax files to give me a look much like the old
Borland midnight theme and I find it much easyer to work with for long
periods of time. I hate using a white background, and kdevelope has never
been very cooperative on this issue. So if I cannot use Anjuta 1.5 I just
use vim.

So what is the deal with Eclipse? Is there one big install that will be the
IDE of choice for all code languages or do I need to download all three
Eclipse IDE's and use other IDE's for other code files?

On Wed, Jun 24, 2009 at 9:40 PM, John Jardine <[email protected]>wrote:

> sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade
> sudo apt-get install build-essential
>
> After that I'd D/L Eclipse, but substitute your preferred environment.
>
>
> On Wed, 2009-06-24 at 21:27 -0600, Craig McLean wrote:
> > Hello.
> >
> > I just installed Ubuntu 9.04 desktop edition for the first time.  I can't
> > seem to find a way of installing a c/c++ development environment at the
> > click of a button.  Some other distributions have a generic development
> > environment item you can pick in the package manager that will install
> all
> > of the standard tools and common libraries.
> >
> > Does Ubuntu have anything similar?  I'd rather not spend the next several
> > hours picking around finding all the bits and pieces I might need.  I
> > realize dependency checking make this easier, but it is still a pain.
> >
> > I will be using this to build software from source.  In the short term
> > Wireshark.
> >
> > Craig.
> >
> >
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