I switched to qtcreator recently, after years of emacs. Qtcreator makes it very easy to jump between the various interesting places in the code, although our C implementation with the private structures doesn't work in qtcreator as well as it could. In pure c++ it works even better.
Christian Paul Conrady <audio1...@gmail.com> schrieb: >John, >About 40 years ago, I studied Fortran and PL/1 in college; 20 years ago >I >learned Pascal; over the years I played around with Basic. I have no >professional experience as a programmer. The coding that I've done has >been >for pleasure or personal necessity, much like now. A few AqBanking >features >do not operate as advertised and I would like to troubleshoot and fix >the >problem. >Paul > > >On Mon, Mar 18, 2013 at 8:04 AM, John Ralls <jra...@ceridwen.us> wrote: > >> >> On Mar 17, 2013, at 11:05 PM, Paul Conrady <audio1...@gmail.com> >wrote: >> >> > This is not a question about GnuCash per se. Since I would like to >> contribute >> > to the development of GnuCash, I thought the developer's here might >be >> the >> > best source of information. >> > >> > I want to start coding in "C" and "C++". Please recommend an IDE >for me. >> > After searching through the Ubuntu and Canonical repos, I am >leaning >> toward >> > Anjuta DevStudio or maybe CodeLite. Since I am learning the >language, all >> > that I require is a simple interface; nothing complex. >> >> I use Emacs, which is about as basic as you can get. >> >> What programming experience do you have? >> >> Regards, >> John Ralls >> >> >_______________________________________________ >gnucash-devel mailing list >gnucash-devel@gnucash.org >https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel -- Sent from mobile. _______________________________________________ gnucash-devel mailing list gnucash-devel@gnucash.org https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel