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What is the best alternative to Groovy/Grails Tool Suite?
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NetBeans IDE
All
11
Experiences
Pros
8
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Con
Little support for UML
Unless you load extensions.
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Pro
Cross-platform
NetBeans is a free, GPL-licensed IDE. It can run on any computer with a Java virtual machine. If a computer has a Java virtual machine (JVM), Netbeans can run on it. Netbeans can, therefore, run on a variety of operating systems such as Windows, *nix, and Mac OS.
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Con
Slow
The Netbeans IDE is known to take a large memory as compared to other lighter IDE's available on the market. The slowdown can decrease productivity and frustrate programmers.
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Pro
Fantastic Maven support
NetBeans has out-of-the-box support for Maven (NetBeans 6.7 and newer), which includes a repository browser.
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Pro
Good refactoring
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Pro
Easy to learn
Very easy to learn, unlike e.g. Eclipse (which is probably the most flexible).
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Pro
Good support for integrated Database e Servers (E.g. Tomcat)
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Pro
Multiple revision control system integration
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Pro
Customizable theme
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Pro
Take less memory
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Specs
Platforms:
Windows, Linux, Mac, BSD
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Experiences
Get it
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195
36
IntelliJ IDEA
All
25
Experiences
Pros
16
Cons
8
Specs
Top
Pro
Smart refactorings
IDEA places an emphasis in safe refactoring, offering a variety of features to make this possible for a variety of languages. These features include safe delete, type migration and replacing method code duplicates.
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Con
Slow startup
Startup can be slow depending on system configuration.
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Pro
Fast and smart contextual assistance
Uses a fast indexing technique to provide contextual hints (auto-completion, available object members, import suggestions). On-the-fly code analysis to detect errors and propose refactorization.
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Con
Uses a lot of RAM
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Pro
Android support, JavaEE support, etc
A very complete development environment support.
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Con
Somewhat expensive
IntelliJ IDEA is fairly expensive, with a pricetag of $149/year. However there is a free community edition available.
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Pro
Support for many languages
IntelliJ supports many languages besides Java, some of these are: golang, Scala, Clojure, Groovy, Bash, etc.
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Con
Built with closed source components
The version with full features is not opensource. Parts of the code are under apache licence though.
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Pro
Lots of plugins
Many plugins are available for almost any task a developer may need to cover. Plugins are developed by Jetbrains themselves or by 3rd parties through the SDK available for writing them.
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Con
Cannot open multiple projects in the same window
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Pro
Stable and robust
IntelliJ IDEA hardly ever crashes or has any issues that plague other Java IDEs like file corruption or slowness.
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Con
Lack of plugins
IntelliJ supports a very small amount of plugins. Although these are 'quality approved', many features are missing and can't be implemented because of that.
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Pro
Intuitive and slick UI
IDEA has a clean, intuitive interface with some customization available (such as the Darcula theme).
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Con
Bugs are not solved as often as they should
They are more interested in adding new features or issuing new versions than solving bugs.
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Pro
Clear and detailed documentation
The documentation is exhaustive, easy to navigate, and clearly worded.
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Con
Standard hotkeys behave differently
Seems like hotkeys assignment in Idea has no logical consistency. Like «F3» is usually next match, «Ctrl+W» - close tab, etc — they map to some different action by default. There is a good effort in making the IDE friendly for immigrants from other products: there are options to use hotkeys from Eclipse, and even emacs. But these mappings are very incomplete. And help pages do not take this remapping into account, rather mentioning the standard hotkeys. So, people coming from other IDEs/editors are doomed to using mouse and context menus (which are rather big and complex).
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Pro
Very powerful debugger
With ability to step into a certain part of a large method invocation (Shift+F7), drop frame, executing code snippets, showing method return values, etc.
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Pro
Free version available
There is a free community edition (open source) and an ultimate edition, which you can compare here. The ultimate edition is available for free for one year for students but must be registered through an .edu e-mail account.
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Pro
Many convenient features
These simplify the daily work, e.g. copy/cut a whole line without the need to select it.
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Pro
Gradle support
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Pro
Built-in Git support
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Pro
Student Benefits
Verify yourselves as a student to get more perks.
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Pro
Embedded database support
Creating an embedded database, running SQL script in a dedicated terminal, viewing tables and their contents, and creating a connection to an in-memory or embedded database is fully supported.
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Pro
Prices are not bad
I pay $24 a month and i have access to all jetbrain peoducts , so i use their many tools , i tried many others like netbeans , eclipse , etc , they re good but intelij is on the space and the sky is the limit . Been using it for 5 years and i cant tell i got frustrated using .it
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Specs
Platforms:
Windows, Linux, Mac
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Experiences
Free / paid
713
124
SlickEdit
All
16
Experiences
Pros
14
Cons
2
Top
Pro
Extensive support for programming languages
SlickEdit supports over 50 programming languages on nine platforms.
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Top
Con
No command line option
This is a visual only editor
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Pro
Built-in beautifier
The beautifier formats code as you type to help improve readability and consistency.
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Con
It's kinda slow
If you have a very large project or tag database, it can hang the UI.
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Pro
Compiler tools
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Pro
Scriptable
Write custom macro commands, functions, dialogs and tool windows.
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Pro
Over 13 emulations
Choose from fifteen keyboard emulations, containing the key bindings and behaviors necessary to emulate other editors (e.g., CUA, Vim, GNU Emacs, etc.)
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Pro
Extensive configuration options
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Pro
Easy access to Visual Studio workspace
SlickEdit opens Visual Studio workspace with no conversions needed.
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Pro
Symbol analysis support
There are powerful symbol analysis features in SlickEdit, including context tagging and references.
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Pro
Integrated debuggers for multiple languages
Integrated debuggers for GNU C++, Java, Python, Perl, Ruby, and PHP.
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Pro
Multi-Platform
Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, AIX, HP-UX, Solaris SPARC, Solaris x86
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Pro
Portable mode
Possibility to set up a portable installation, to run on a USB drive for example.
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Pro
Easy access to XCode projects
SlickEdit opens XCode projects with no conversions needed.
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Pro
Third party tool integration
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Pro
Popular version control system
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Experiences
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