Borland Releases Kylix 3.0 for Delphi and C++
An anonymous reader writes "Looks like Borland is giving us Kylix for C++ after all. Kylix 3.0 is available in Open, Professional, and Enterprise versions. Time to start banging out those CLX apps! The Register also has a story about this."
Trolling Stones' lyrics quiz!
See if you can get them all without using a search engine
You must provide the artist and song title for full credit.
1) got a green light
got a green light yeah
but you're going nowhere
2) and not even worry about getting burned
i would climb the empire state
fight muhammed ali
just to have you baby close to me
3) but did she make you cry
make you break down
shatter your illusions of love
and tell me is it over now
do you know how to pick up the pieces and go home
4) doesn't anybody ever know
that the world's a subway
5) all my friends are indians
all my friends are brown and red
all my friends are skeletons
and they beat the rhythm with their bones
g to the oatse
c to the izzex
fo shizzle my nizzle Subway has a special deal on troll tuesdays. Any footlong sub for $3.49
I never succeed in getting one
The writer seems to think that Kylix 3 will be a C++ replacement for Kylix 2. Kylix 3 will support C++ in addition to the existing feature set.
The only good product they have every released was JBuilder.
There's no use in releasing products made by small teams with tons of bugs just in order to have yet another product.
We love you borland, stick to JBuilder.
I wonder how seemless the Delphi and C++ will be. I also wonder if you can use the GNU C++ compiler for the C++ part, or only the Borland C++ compiler.
I don't know about Delphi, but most of our code is developed in Delhi.
Any fool can talk, but it takes a wise man to listen.
sexual horses, galloping across the sky,
sexual horses, huge penises, rolling over you and I,
sexual horses, with testicles in dainty stocking ruffle-holders,
sexual horses, bursting semen all over horse lovers,
sexual horses, muscles rippling as they fuck teenage girl-horses,
sexual horses, eyes wide as they sweat and pant and sniff rotting fecal piles,
sexual horses, nostrils filled with microbes and lust,
sexual horses, fuck your motherfucking skulls into dust.
It would be most excellent to not be boxed into to using GCC to compile the Linux kernal. Single-sourced is always a bad idea.
I won't use Kylix until they do. I have no intention of having my Linux system tied to a set of proprietary libraries. I left Windows to get away from that sort of thing.
And before anyone jumps in and claims that Qt is GPL'd, remember that Kylix is a commercial closed-source application, so it can't use the GPL'd version of Qt, and must use the proprietary-licensed version.
I think I'm as excited as any other coder about this development. The GNU team should be congratulated for doing so well with gcc and g++. It's amazing what people can do when they work together for years on end, even when they don't have any formal training or skills. But the availability of Kylix will be a breath of fresh air for those of us who want to be able to write standard C++ on the Linux platform without battling the bugs that plague g++ 3.0.
Anyone else similarly excited?
Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
Je t'aime Stéphanie
Just Linux.NET? I mean honostly, it's just trying to do what .NET is already doing. Of course, even with the trial .NET port, this is a better solution as .NET was never designed for linux.
Ever since Shirley Manson destroyed her hair, Kylie Minogue is easily my favorite non-American musician to look at. I'm glad they finally freed her... I'd like to keep her locked up myself!
Happy Troll Tuesday!
Introduction
A fairy gives lectures on morality to the feline anomaly. Furthermore, another photon near an abstraction takes a coffee break, and a mortician buries a blithe spirit. The wedding dress secretly admires a college-educated ball bearing. If the freight train figures out a fire hydrant near a pit viper, then some mating ritual beyond another cowboy reads a magazine. Any squid can find lice on a freight train, but it takes a real recliner to ostensibly plan an escape from another pit viper defined by a prime minister a cough syrup toward a graduated cylinder.
Another mating ritual
For example, a blood clot about a turn signal indicates that a financial bartender borrows money from a warranty. When a demon is imaginative, a paper napkin secretly admires an often snooty graduated cylinder. If the grain of sand learns a hard lesson from the short order cook behind some graduated cylinder, then another blithe spirit flies into a rage. Any pig pen can lazily require assistance from a burly plaintiff, but it takes a real fighter pilot to caricature the steam engine over a satellite. Another eagerly temporal minivan slyly buries the obsequious squid, or a briar patch usually gives lectures on morality to a cyprus mulch.
A gratifying fairy
Sometimes another cashier reads a magazine, but the fraction for the cyprus mulch always buries a power drill toward the demon! The light bulb befriends a satellite of an apartment building. A lazily Alaskan roller coaster sanitizes another mitochondrial traffic light, or some burglar eats a hesitantly smelly plaintiff. For example, a seldom righteous traffic light indicates that an ocean knows some chestnut inside the tabloid. If the earring somewhat finds subtle faults with a pine cone, then the wheelbarrow hibernates.
The cocker spaniel about the salad dressing
For example, the umbrella toward an abstraction indicates that the dolphin near a ball bearing caricatures a girl scout near some diskette. A cocker spaniel for the judge reads a magazine, and a pine cone finds subtle faults with a rattlesnake. Furthermore, the hairy movie theater returns home, and a grizzly bear near a paycheck is a big fan of a childlike burglar. For example, a canyon living with a graduated cylinder indicates that the industrial complex buries a jersey cow.
Conclusions
A squid around a jersey cow meditates, and another nation sweeps the floor; however, a scooby snack knowingly finds subtle faults with an apartment building living with another chain saw. When a hockey player around a paycheck is smelly, a minivan has a change of heart about an oil filter about an asteroid. The bartender around a polygon is barely soggy. Indeed, another rattlesnake befriends a warranty. Indeed, the carpet tack for an abstraction usually caricatures an elusive h
- posted by poopbot: news for turds, stuff that splatters
wMVsCEOfYN Post #476
Personally I don't see why this item is such news. IIRC Borland always said they would support C++ at some later date, and now they are.
Now we just have to wait for really poor UI#s like all of the early Deplhi ones...
This is great news for developers, as long as they only want there apps to run on x86 boxen.
Since when is having multiple xterms "not easy to use"?
[1] http://www.heise.de/newsticker/data/hos-23.07.02-0 00/
[2] http://www.borland.com/kylix/open/index.html
I've actually used Kylix 2.0 Open Edition to cross-compile a shareware game I've been working on in Delphi 6. It's very convienent to have one set of source code, and simply re-compile with Kylix for Linux distribution! (Yes, avoiding Windows API calls and such helps... plus I'm using JEDI-SDL (Simple DirectMedia Layer) for graphic/sound cross-platform stuff). Perhaps now instead of people saying, you can't develop cross-platform games with Delphi you should use C++... I can simple agree (instead of arguing and pointing out that Kylix is cross-platform) and say, sure, I could do that and use the same compiler I've been using all along... leaving certain code in Delphi, but re-writting parts in C++ (just for fun) but no, I don't have to use C++ it's just a language - I prefer Kylix 3.0 for my development environment!
This would be a major reason for schools on tight budgets to turn to Linux for computer programming classes! Why pay for the Microsoft tools (and tax) when this is available? Seems the LTSP folks should look into this...
Code, Hardware, stuff like that.
This is no text in this reply. Thank you.
two powerful object-oriented languages in on development solution
Netcraft has confirmed: Taco-snotting is dying.
Yet another crippling bombshell hit the beleaguered Taco-snotting community when recently IDC confirmed that Taco-snotting accounts for less than a fraction of 1 percent of all homosexual acts. Coming on the heels of the latest Netcraft survey which plainly states that Taco-snotting has lost more fag practitioners, this news serves to reinforce what weve known all along. Taco-snotting faggots are collapsing in complete disarray, as further exemplified by failing dead last in the recent Faggot World comprehensive snotting test.
You dont need to be a Katz to predict Taco-snottings future. The handwriting is on the wall: Taco-snotting faces a bleak future. In fact there wont be any future at all for Taco-snotting because Taco-snotting is dying. Things are looking very bad for Taco-snotting. As many of us are already aware, Taco-snotting continues to lose faggotshare. White ink flows like a river of bubbly, thick jizz. The circle-snot is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of its core snotters.
Lets keep to the facts and look at the numbers.
Circle-snotting leader Jeff Homos Masterbates states that there are 7000 snotters of the circle-snot. How many users of anal snot are there? Lets see. The number of circle-snotting versus anal snot posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 anal snot users. SnotOS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of anal snot posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of SnotOS. A recent article put the circle-snot at about 80 percent of the Taco-snotting market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 circle-snot users. This is consistent with the number of circle-snot Usenet posts.
Due to the troubles of CowboiKneels walnuts, abysmal sales and so on, the circle-snot went out of business and was taken over by SNOTi who sell another troubled Taco-snot. Now SNOTi is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another gay whorehouse.
All major surveys show that Taco-snotting has steadily declined in faggotshare. Taco-snotting is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If Taco-snotting is to survive at all it will be among heterosexual hobbyist dabblers. Taco-snotting continues to decay. Nothing short of a jizz-soaked miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, Taco-snotting is dead.
Fact: Taco-snotting is dead.
Any links to screenshots of the IDE?
hot grits poured down natalie portman's pants
free (as in mp3s) electronic music
I know they haven't even released a client yet, but Bioware told us that they couldn't port the NWN toolset because there is no borland c++ builder for Linux.
Now there is. Anyone think they'll port it after the client?
I looked all over the Kylix website, and failed to locate any screenshots for their product. What gives?
:-/
Yes, I know I can download a Trial, if I go through the registration process... but I just wanted to look at it.
I've never heard of a product page without product images. Wierd.
Anyone have a link?
Is there standard command line compiler in Kylix? Is it possible to compile existing programs - for example Linux kernel - with it?
It will be nice if gcc wouldn't be only choice.
How do written C++ GUI programs function with Kylix? Does one write C++ and does use thereby headers for the CLX library, which is implemented in Pascal (must do thus without multiple inheritance etc.)? And then by Pascal over the detour of non-object-oriented code one accesses the Qt-library written in correct C++? If it's like that, then one remains nevertheless rather directly during a genuine C++ Entwicklungsumgebung.
Hey all you slashbots
translation follows
Ti's rtol Teusday at slashdot tuday. Were all hooked on phoniks because we kant spell. Why due yuo thikn we usee acronimes?
LEARN TO SPELL YOU DUMB FUCKS
CmdrTaco, chrisd, Hemos, all you dumb fucks!!!
This site has a free HTML editor with spell check. Try it out atChami.comYeah, it only runs on windows, but since you guys can't seem to use ispell or aspell I think you need to switch to something more user friendly. And quit using Mozlla
When does it give after Delphi.NET a Kylix.NET based on mono?
While it seems that Delphi, Kylix and JBuilder are going strong, Borland has all but abandoned the (seemingly) less profitable Borland Database Engine. Too bad, too since a lot of applications make use of the BDE.
I'm using such an application right now, and due to some size limits on the BDE's config file, i'm unable to use it as efficiently/effectively as possible. Borlands tech support doesn't cover the BDE, and the only newsgroup on the BDE is not monitored by Borland folks frequently enough (if at all).
While i can understand scaling back certain aspects of one of your product lines, to shift focus/userbase to newer/better products, we're talking the BDE here for Pete's sake!
It's just frustrating.
There are 01 types of people in this world. Those that understand binary, and me.
To download a trial version you have to register. If you choose a username that is already in use, it prompts you to choose another one with a form where all the ``spam me'' boxes you unchecked in your first submission have been re-checked . Bastards.
I feel tricked I went to the Borland site to try to download, foudn out I had to register. Only to find out after registering that only version two is downloadable..
ok borland have been shipping their CPP compiler for a while on linux (nothing new)
what this release does I would think is link aganst the CLX to do the GUI stuff
and add their CPP IDE (which is actually visual and drag and drop unlike microsofts which is just a text editor but they call it visual...)
now if they where useing STANDARD CPP why should using GCC be impossible (I suspect they have a few broken things in terms of standard support just like gcc has a few broken things) and the fact that CPP changes every meeting does not help but it would be nice if they said what gcc would require to do this
(I am not talking about opening up CLX just linking your code with it useing gnu tools)
borland selling in effect libs and a IDE would be a good thing IMHO
regards
john jones
Borland's only a couple years late.
Good try, anyway.
RHIDE had me pretending to be using Turbo C++ for the longest time.
DataCAD is written in Delphi. I wonder how hard a port would be?
I bet you have a NY Times registration. Is VA software getting kickbacks for clickthroughs?
I think so.
I love the smell of choice in the morning :-)
Never Winter Nights gameeditor for linux hasnt been released because of this. It was build with c++ builder but they couldnt release it for linux because they didnt have Kylix yet to allow. Yew! Wonder who fast isle can provide the editor ;))
yush
They dual license the libraries so they can be used either GPL or proprietary... you really should know what you're talking about before you flame...
Please stop trolling.
hosted on Sourceforge http://freeclx.sourceforge.net/
Grrrrrr.....
anyhows
C++ looks good, C Builder has always had far better debuging tools than Delphi, I hope Kylix C++ has decient debugging.
The professional version now has a postgres driver, there was a serious lack of DB drivers in Kylix 1 professional.
Kylix 2 had an odd dependency on Wine I hope thats fixed now.
Looks like it's time to upgrade that Kylix 1 Pro box set I've got sat on the shelf...
thank God the internet isn't a human right.
Perhaps more important, on the C++ side, is the general fact that code compiled with one C++ compiler is not likely to work with code generated by a different compiler. C++ specifies the use of name mangling, but doesn't specify how that is to be implemented. So all your class names and so on are represented in some compiler-specific way in the shared libraries, making them inaccessible to programs compiled with a different C++ compiler, unless the makers of the two compilers have gotten together and somehow agreed on exactly how to do the name mangling (which has not happened to date, that I've heard of).
I can't speak for C support, but the failure of Borland C++ to support the GNU compiler is inevitable, and not anyone's fault, except maybe Bjarne Stroustrup's.
one hundred twenty
is just enough characters
to write a haiku
exporting the project to GNU makefile....
:)
several shortcuts and completion style things
debugging spawn processes, connecting to running processes. Almost anything debugging related it appears
dataaware compents such as labels (!), edit boxes, listboxes...
and a lot of other nice features.
No complaints, they are trying to sell it
-- Who is the bigger fool? The fool or the fool who follows him? --
That's why it's an odd dependency, Kylix 1 didn't need wine for the GUI (unless it was static?)
While I'd aggree that Microsoft makes it 'cheep' to by Visuial Studio, they don't make it that cheep to buy the platform licences.
Also Visual Studio has the crapest development environment I've ever used and the help is shite. It's easier to write code in notepad than VC++, even the windows 9x version of notepad with the 64k file size limit.
thank God the internet isn't a human right.
Borland doesn't use standard C++, well that's not quite true, there C++ compiler used to be and probably still is the most ANSI compliant but Borland have there own C++ extensions.
Closures
and
Properties.
a closure works like this
struct closure{
* thispointer;
* functionpointer
}
calling closure(1,2,3) effectivly does thispointer->function(1,2,3) or
functionpointer(thispointer,1,2,3);
Properties are user friendly, natural getters and setters.
I don't think that GCC will works with them...
thank God the internet isn't a human right.
A search of google did reveal however that there is a shocking number of companies who seem to believe that there is something called "GNU Perl" including apparently IBM. I'm not holding my breath for RMS to spend any of his time correcting this widespread inaccurate credit of Perl to the GNU project.
No they don't...
Maybe the core debuggers the same but CBuilder has a more fully featured debugger e.g. intergrated buffer over run checking and all sorts of other lovely stuff...
So ya don't want to register to download the free Open Edition (GPL'd) or the trial version of Kylix 3.0, but you want to know more? Here ya go:
Screenshots of Kylix IDE...(an alpha version)
http://www.drbob42.com/kylix/hotshot.htm
Features of Kylix 3.0...
http://borland.com/kylix/pdf/kyl3_feamatrix.pdf
Or, go here and take the Product TOUR (if you have time to view their Flash 5 presentation and get all the sales-speak you can swallow i.e. good to show to boss).
Filter - The Best Things
Fabulous Thunderbirds - Tuff Enuff
Fleetwood Mac - Gold Dust Woman
Our Lady Peace - Superman's Dead
Soundgarden - Spoonman
thanks and props to all those who participated. Look for another quiz tomorrow
g to the oatse
c to the izzex
fo shizzle my nizzle the italian bmt at subway is a good deal. 3 kinds of meat, plus cheese on a sub. What it lacks in quality it makes up in quantity.
Terms and conditions
:).
As a condition to download or receive an activation key for Kylix 2 Open Edition, we are asking for your consent to be contacted from time to time by us and/or one of our affiliates, representatives or partners, by either email, postal mail, telephone and/or facsimile, to ask you about your experience with Kylix 2 Open Edition and/or inform you about other products and/or services offered by Borland or its affiliates or partners that we think may be of interest to you. If at any time you wish to revoke your consent, you may do so by updating your account profile.
I hereby consent.
I do not consent.
Read another way "We'll give you this free, but we'll bombard you with spam, snail mail and phone calls." I don't mind the first two as much (filters work well for spam), but my phone number is my precious. Then again it is a $10,000 fine to make an unsolicited call to a cell phone
Not quite. People really wanted it under the LGPL or BSD licenses, just like GTK+, FLTK, FOX, wxWindows, etc.
One of the problems (unless you follow Stallman's manifesto) is that although the Free version is free for open-source, their commercial licenses are structured so that if at any point in time your software project is touched by a free (free, non-commercial, acedemic, etc) version of Qt, you may never at any later time buy a commercial license and release your software commercially.
Anybody know where to download the open version from? It's not on borlands site!!!
Have they finally improved stability and speed? Kylix 1 and 2 both felt very slow (because of all the Wine stuff), and somehow Kylix 2 crashes when I try to save a project.
To be honest, I'm disappointed at Kylix. It does not provide the quality I expect from Borland.
Somebody please tell me they've improved stability and speed!
And what's new in Kylix 3? Is there something new in Kylix 3? I don't even know what has changed between Kylix 1 and Kylix 2 (certainly not stability).
C++ ABI in Linux has had many issues. C++ binaries produced in EGCS, GCC 2.95.x, 2.96.x, 3.x, and possibly the upcoming 3.2 (I read something about breaking compatibility to fix a bug in the mailing list) are all incompatible.
How does Borland address this issue? Or does it only produce binaries for one specific configuration?
Now your talking shite.
Visual studio is
nested MDI with no optout option, this is great if you suffer from claustrophobia and hate those evil shitty docking windows that just won't go where you put them.
Hard to find you way around.
Piss poor HTML help
Not visual.
Has hidden options all over the place.
Certainly KDevelop, JBuilder don't follow that design, i haven't used Eclipse, ProjectBuilder so I can't comment.
Use somthing like CBuilder and you'll find out what an IDE should be like, and don't go crying to mummy when billy boys cock doesn't taste so good
Nag screens are a relatively new invention to shareware, it doesn't define the genre.
Before nag screens were time limited apps.
Before time limited apps there was missing functionality (what the parent was refering to).
Before missing functionality, there was time limited apps.
etc, etc, etc
Soemthing like Paint Shop Pro has run the gambit on how to enforce its shareware over all the versons I have seen.
Does anyone know if mysql support still requires a particular version?
thanks -mike
Does anyone know if it is possible to use some sort of toolchain with Kylix to cross-compile software for architectures other than x86?
> They dual license the libraries so they can be used either GPL or proprietary... you really should know what you're talking about before you flame...
But there is nothing in writing, not even in the agreement with the KDE Foundation, that says that the GPL'd version and the proprietary version must remain the same.
Thus, in terms of safety (i.e. freedom from lock-in), the proprietary version must be treated as if it were a separate product. Proprietary Qt can't be redistributed, it can't be forked, and companies that use it for closed-source development can't legally switch to the GPL'd version.
You really should think before you flame...
All I can find is the 2.0 download which is just Delphi.
Your going to have to run the applications like this:
myapp -ns
splash screens suck - brokenware
We're close with this. In some glorious future, there will be a C++Builder that doesn't care if it's running under Linux, 'Doze, or OS X for that matter.
While we're at it, the groovy IDE is nice, but making all of the plumbing interchangeable is a Good Thing.
Don't mind paying for well thought-out product, just don't want the blood-on-goatskin experience of dealing with Redmond.
I guess CodeWarrior specializes in that sort of platform gymnastics, but their pricing for the Palm version didn't excite a purchase out of me...
Anyway, I had gaffed off the upgrade from C++Builder 5 in anticipation of this...
Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
.
Delhi is in India, but Delphi is in different country.
It is in BorLand.
I became quite excited to try it. While being completely satisfied with the GNU environment, I'd *really* like to use a fast, straightforward development environment, such as Turbo C 2.0 (do you guys remember *that*?) I know several years passed by since then, but thought Kylix is getting closer and closer to something that makes sense just like their DOS based tools did.
:-)) and reliability of an app that's apparently been "ported" from Windows. For developing C++ applications on/for Linux.
I usually stop the installation of a "commercial" application when it fails to get RPM packages housed on my Debian (sid) system. I didn't stop now, backed perhaps by my respect of their good products (Delphi excluded).
Kylix's rpm based install tool failed, too (surprise!). I didn't stop tough, not even after hacking together a wrapper script around rpm (in order to get along the "failing" package dependencies (needless to say I have all neccessary libs/packages installed). I even tried to alienalize & install the provided rpm's -- no luck either (postinstall scripts still failing).
I still didn't give up at this point, had a look inside the package contents for another way to get around. After I've realized they contain wine libraries, all my interest & excitement suddenly disappeared. In fact, turned into massive disappointment.
The GNU toolbox works perfectly, there are excellent, graphical, native debugging tools too (DDD, for instance)... no fancy IDE, F9 shortcut, sure, but anyway... why should I bother?
Which brings us to the same old mantra about RedHat vs other distros. Not to mention the quality, resource footprint (yes, I've upgraded my box since the TC2 times
Not for me, thanks. Am I the only one?
- Can't trace preprocessor code during debugging.
- Can't inspect the value of a #define during debugging. I prefer const variables.
- You undermine the code completion because it doesn't know about the existence of the property. When you press '.' or '->' you will not see your property in the popup window.
- Can very easily introduce obscure bugs that can be hard to find.
Take a look at MFC message maps to understand why using the preprocessor as a language is a mistake. I'm sorry but I disagree with you. Altering the language can be a good thing. Adding a new feature is not the only criterion for altering the language. If the alteration helps productivity then I am for the alteration being done. C++, especially, could really use it.It's slick to be able to port our apps easily in Delphi and C++ from Windows to Linux, but for those who are used to developing there, they still have to pay the big bucks for a C++ Builder or Delphi license under Windows -- Kylix Open or not.
It should be noted that Borland also releases free as in beer "Personal" versions of C++ Builder and Delphi.
... applications". Basically they include all the standard gui VCL components included in the non-free (Professional and Enterprise) versions of C++ Builder and Delphi (just with a different license) minus the data access / web components. Having used Delphi 5 Enterprise extensively at work, I can vouch that for real-world gui and database intensive application development, these features are invaluable timesavers. However, in an educational environment as suggested by the parent post, where the focus would almost certainly be beginning or at most intermediate programming (eg. general language concepts), the Personal versions of either of these would more than suffice for any classroom needs.
Both are similar in features and license to Kylix Open Edition (the Delphi personal description specifically mentions its intended use is to create "non-commercial Windows
In other words, while I wouldn't expect these to provide much of a shot in the arm for schools migrating to Linux, it speaks volumes for Borland and their commitment to Linux (Kylix) and its ideals (the open source-ish license of the Windows-based Personal versions).
This is not offtopic. I don't want to imagine the nightmare that is the half-assed code you sling.
LURN TOO SPELL!!!And stop using Mozlla
Does it still have the clause in their open-edition licence that they have permission to come in & search your premesis (to check for commercial usage) if you install their software?
===> An eye for an eye makes everyone blind - MG
Well, if you'd like to stick with Borland, there's always 'J'Builder. It runs on the platforms you mention.
:)
Oh, C++, my mistake.
But when do the training wheels come off? Either you learn to adapt to new environments easily, or you use an environment that will always be there and will always provide what you need it to do.
.NET and C#. Yet Unix people are still using the same tools they've always used, emacs or vi, and just drop in a new compiler and extend the syntax rules in the editor for the new programming language. On proprietary systems, developers purchase a new system.
While you can rely on a language, you shouldn't need to rely on the tool. Especially proprietary tools.
This is probably one reason a lot of really good developers prefer the unix tools, mostly emacs or vi rather than the latest fad, because a fad is exactly what it is. One year its C++ and Visual Studio, the next year its Java, now its
So I think you're right when saying that developing in a "visual" environment is easier and you can catch on to programming quicker. But I believe that investing some more time into a "unix" tool is more valuable for your programming career. Actually, this isn't my idea--something I read on USENET.
And that's why I am spending time learning emacs. Because I don't think I'm wasting my time.
How is this unfair? Is leeching a basic human right?
Yep, you want something that is simple enough to not overload your brain with details while you are trying to grasp the general principles.
Examples:
Python's Tkinter module (from within IDLE or just a Python shell)
FLUID, the almost unbelievably easy C++ IDE for libfltk).
There are richer IDEs with more features, but in their respective computer languages, these would be hard to beat for simplicity. I think there's a pretty cool Scheme one too, but I forget what it's called.
-- What do you need?
-- Gnus. Lots of Gnus.
Kylix 3 is NOT yet available for downloaded.
If you go to this page
http://borland.com/products/downloads/download_ky
you will see that the latest version of Kylix (open version) is version 2.
So, who has the url for downloading Kylix 3 ?
Care to share ?
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
The product hasn't been released yet! Not even the non-free versions. The web site doesn't make this clear, I admit.
Troll ? that was no troll. It was an opinion, you know freedom of expression and all that rot.
You seem to be defending Trolltech, yet your lack of understanding of Free Software makes you sound like a Microsoft astroturfer. Strange...
Free Software is not about money.
Free Software is about freedom.
In practical terms, it's about ensuring that you won't get locked in and controlled, the way Microsoft uses their software and protocols to control their users.
Nobody cares about the fact that Trolltech is charging for their product. If I was bothered about people charging for products, then why would I be defending the freedom of commercial closed-source developers?
What I care about is that Trolltech is following the same lock-in scheme as Microsoft, by getting commercial developers hooked on a proprietary version of Qt. Plus, Trolltech is using the GPL'd version of Qt as a smokescreen, to try to hide their lock-in scheme.
A proprietary closed-source applications is not that big a problem, because you know up front what you are getting into, and how how much you are getting locked in. I have willingly paid for such applications, for example, I bought Applixware, which I considered a safe bet because I knew that the file-formats were documented.
But proprietary shared libraries are very bad, because it gets hooks into multiple applications from multiple companies. With proprietary shared libraries, you can become totally locked in, and never see it coming. That's how Microsoft gained their control over Windows users.
As for this MS astroturfer bollocks, you might find out when you grow up that the world is not some big "Microsoft vs, You" contest. How my comments could be interpreted as you have interpreted them is beyond reason.
If Bjarn Stroustrup has anything to say about it, it won't happen. I wrote him an email about this a couple years back and he replied that he believes (or believed anyhow) that properties don't belong in C++. Without his support it's unlikely it will become a standard any time soon. Unfortunate :-( I think it's just a case of providing us with as many tools as possible and laying the responsibility of proper use on the developer, which *is* what C++ is all about, right?