[GRLUG] C and C++ programing environment
Michael Mol
mikemol at gmail.com
Mon Apr 9 22:59:20 EDT 2007
For what it's worth, I learned C and C++ using vim and gcc...
On 4/9/07, Jordan Hudson <jodanlime at gmail.com> wrote:
> yeah, I have heard all of the emacs vs vim talk and stuff, and plan to use
> that after I actually learn the language. I will try your other suggestions
> tomorrow, thanks alot guys. I do not wish to create cross platform programs,
> only to have the same IDE for all 3 OS's, as I find myself switching between
> the three often.
>
>
>
>
> On 4/9/07, John J Foerch <jjfoerch at earthlink.net> wrote:
> > There is Emacs. It is what I use for writing all my
> > software. Emacs is probably the single best program that
> > exists--and I'm only half joking. :) The drawback is its
> > steep learning curve for newbies, so it may be an
> > unrealistic work-load to try to learn emacs at the same time
> > as doing a lot of school work on deadline. In the longer
> > term, it is definitely a program worth knowing.
> >
> > John Foerch
> >
> >
> > Jordan Hudson writes:
> > > thanks for all the suggestions. anjuta and kdevelop don't work on mac
> and
> > > windows though, and I couldn't find out how to create and test a c
> program
> > > with eclipse, although it looks cool. Any others that somebody can
> suggest?
> > > or has somebody have a suggestion for creating c and c++ files in
> eclipse,
> > > it looks like its just for Java to me.
> > >
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> >
>
>
>
>
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