welcome to the world of java
<
venividi> hooray for emacs and jdee. *much* easier, faster, and more resource friendly than eclipse.
<venividi> (that's *right* folks, i've found something where emacs is *more*
resource friendly than the competitor...)
no subject
Also, emacs used to be the bomb back in college, but that was before I had to boot a server from a tape backup in maintenance mode...
no subject
Please, somebody, prove to me that similarly spec'd hardware can, under similar conditions, handle the same load whether it's some raggedy-ass LAMP setup or finely-tuned MS/MS-CF setup.
no subject
The proof of this is that we're using Java for ANYTHING, let alone almost everything.
I just got done coding a really slick perl app for NASA that runs almost entirely out of RAM cache and hardly ever touches the disk, but does anyone care?
Nah. They'd rather have it in Java so they can have their junior code monkeys hack on it.
no subject
I've written software that serves up a handful of pages a second, and barely registers on the CPU, with the incredible innovation of writing static pages to disk as HTML files and letting Apache serve them up.
no subject
It replaced a monstrosity of embperl templates, served afresh from disk every time they were hit. Because the previous contractor couldn't be bothered to design a database schema, they stored all the data as serialized hashes in CLOB fields. Yay.
no subject
(Anonymous) 2006-01-23 02:21 am (UTC)(link)Overall, I find it to be a huge productivity enhancer.
There is a free 30-day trial.
(Note - There is an annoying issue I see with the 5.0.2 release on Debian - my typing goes to the wrong open tab! You may want to just use 4.0 if you're on a Linux platform. Hell, any release since 3.0 is pretty damn spiffy.)
no subject
It's not too bad as IDEs go, although it's still slightly behind where Cafe and Visual J++ were five years ago. (My current client is IBM, so my chances of being able to use IntelliJ are basically zero.)
Tomcat 5, when coupled with Eclipse and the Sysdeo plugin, has also finally reached a tolerable modicum of usability, although it's documented even more poorly than was version 4.
Emacs is fine for Java apps that are intended to be shell-launched, but I swear to God I would go postal on somebody if I had to configure Tomcat manually.