Re: PrimeFaces IDE Poll
Posted: 08 Oct 2013, 21:21
I would use Netbeans if they supported IBM WebSphere...
Now using Eclipse.
Now using Eclipse.
Exactly my case too. I can not imagine to go back to other IDEs. The problem with this voting is that most people will vote for Eclipse / NetBeans because an excellent JSF support is only available in the commercial version of IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate. Well, it costs not much money, but the most companies prefer to use well-known free IDEs such as Eclipse / NetBeans.I have used Eclipse and Netbeans many times over the years, but I always gravitate back to Intellij. There simply is no better IDE in my opinion.
+1 glad to hear this!java versatec wrote:I have been using Netbeans since version 4.5. Never liked Eclipse because even simple tasks need just soooo much more clicking and typing than Netbeans.
+1 but I recognized that you are using Glassfish. NetBeans works really really well with Glassfish, but NetBeans does not work real well with TomEE. Clarification: everything you can do netBeans+Glassfish, you cannot do all of the same with netbeans+tomee. why, because netbeans sees tomee = tomcat, and tomcat is 'not' a Java EE container. hopefully, netbeans will consider adding more support for tomee.java versatec wrote:For instance in Netbeans I can create an EJB project - complete with CDI / EJB / JPS / JMS - and include this project under 'libraries' to any web project I like and it will just work like a library. Nobody has ever managed to show me how to achieve the same with Eclipse.
+1java versatec wrote:And while my colleagues used to need 1- 3 days to configure their eclipse for new projects I was always up and coding in under 2 hours. Except for 1 colleague who does android development the entire team switched to Netbeans after they had watched me for a while. At first they had all looked down on me / made fun of me because 'everybody knows Eclipse is the way to go'; now they are making fun of Eclipse users (I do not get why people have to make fun of others, why can they not accept each to their own?).
I'd like to know how someone can spend more than one hour to configure IDE... It takes me 30-45 minutes to upgrade my Eclipse, import previous workspace with 30 projects, install plugins and start coding... Maybe it's the JBoss Tools thing or something (like knowing what to do)java versatec wrote:And while my colleagues used to need 1- 3 days to configure their eclipse for new projects I was always up and coding in under 2 hours.
IntelliJ stores all this kind of information in user home folder under a specific folder. So, when a new IntelliJ version is available, simple install it. It will take all settings from the previous version automatically.I'd like to know how someone can spend more than one hour to configure IDE... It takes me 30-45 minutes to upgrade my Eclipse, import previous workspace with 30 projects, install plugins and start coding... Maybe it's the JBoss Tools thing or something (like knowing what to do)
IntelliJ sounds pretty much awesome Would be nice to test it if I got enough time...Oleg wrote:IntelliJ stores all this kind of information in user home folder under a specific folder. So, when a new IntelliJ version is available, simple install it. It will take all settings from the previous version automatically.I'd like to know how someone can spend more than one hour to configure IDE... It takes me 30-45 minutes to upgrade my Eclipse, import previous workspace with 30 projects, install plugins and start coding... Maybe it's the JBoss Tools thing or something (like knowing what to do)
NetBeans does that (too).Oleg wrote:IntelliJ stores all this kind of information in user home folder under a specific folder. So, when a new IntelliJ version is available, simple install it. It will take all settings from the previous version automatically.