Hi Peter,

... and don't miss to backup your old settings and project files, as
importing and opening the old projects with new NB version quietly
changes a lot in both, so you may have problems when there is the need
to switch back to 8.0.2.


About C/C++ I can tell, that using the old plugin from 8.2 with new NB
10.0 works so far, will say, editing and running work fine, code
evaluation has some ignorable glitches, but usage of the debugger is
broken and maybe more.


-Ulf


Am 22.06.19 um 17:57 schrieb Emilio G.C.:
> Do in fact write back here if you find that some of your projects
> don't work quite right.
> We'll be happy to help.
>
> EGC
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> *From:* Geertjan Wielenga <geert...@apache.org>
> *Sent:* Saturday, June 22, 2019 10:45
> *To:* Peter Toye
> *Cc:* users@netbeans.apache.org
> *Subject:* Re: Coming back to Netbeans
>  
> Welcome back, install from scratch (unzip the ZIP from
> netbeans.apache.org <http://netbeans.apache.org>), open your projects,
> should be fine (except if you’re using C/C++), and you should also be
> able to import your settings.
>
> Gj
>
>
> On Sat, 22 Jun 2019 at 17:39, Peter Toye <netbe...@ptoye.com
> <mailto:netbe...@ptoye.com>> wrote:
>
>     I've not used NetBeans for some time, but probably want to start
>     using it again. But a lot had happened since then: Apache has
>     taken over from Oracle, and my old version (8.0.2) is way out of date.
>
>     Is there an easy way to upgrade from that version to the latest
>     stable one (whichever that is) and keep my existing projects? Or
>     do I have to start from scratch? And are there any gotchas?
>
>     I'm using Windows 7 SP1 Home.
>
>      
>     Thanks in advance,
>
>     Peter
>     mailto:netbe...@ptoye.com
>     www.ptoye.com <http://www.ptoye.com>
>

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