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Drool, Britannia? Is the UK Failing the Cloud?
By Roger Strukhoff
Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud. We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
Jan. 8, 2012 11:38 AM EST
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General Java
NetBeans: It's Not Just for Java Anymore
Using dynamic languages

By: Tim Boudreau
Jun. 23, 2008 12:00 PM
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Java developers have had a nice ride the last few years. With ferocious competition in the Java tools space, the tools they use have been getting better and better. Where one tool innovates, such as with quick fixes, competitors quickly duplicate and expand on that innovation. This has led to a fertile field of tools for Java developers to choose from. Developers using other languages have not been so lucky, but this is changing.

NetBeans 6.0 involved a complete rewrite of the Java code editor to use the parser that belongs to javac, the Java language compiler that comes with the JDK, to add missing editor features in a way that would be sustainable and solid for the foreseeable future. As a result, its code editor is now very competitive in features and performance to other IDEs. NetBeans 6.1 adds support for additional dynamic languages.

Develop Using Dynamic Languages in NetBeans
NetBeans 6.0 introduced full-blown support for the Ruby language – the first in an ongoing list of dynamic languages the NetBeans IDE will support. The innovations and benefits of that ferocious competition in the Java space are now finding their way to developers who might not even know or care to know Java. You can download the NetBeans 6.0 IDE with just Ruby support but no Java editing support if that’s what you want – and the Ruby-only download of the NetBeans IDE weighs in at a tiny 22MB, including the JRuby runtime and Rails framework.

Supporting dynamic languages in a development tool is notoriously hard because they’re, well, dynamic. A Ruby object can say, “Hmm, I think now I want to be subclass of String,” and with one line of code, do that at runtime. Analyzing code flow to the degree that one can figure out that something became a String subclass on-the-fly and determine where code completion should and shouldn’t offer completions for the String is nearly impossible.

Fortunately, most programmers who use dynamic languages program as if they were writing in a strongly typed language. An editor can infer quite a bit of context with some margin of error. Objects make programming easier for the human mind to grapple with, since human beings are used to thinking of things as, well, things. Objects make programming more accessible by leveraging existing human mental constructs. They are an affordance for the human mind, and the fact that it is likely they will be used means a code editor can take advantage of that affordance as well.

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Published Jun. 23, 2008— Reads 11,145 — Feedback 1
Copyright © 2008 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
About Tim Boudreau
Tim Boudreau is a senior staff engineer at Sun Microsystems. He has been working on the NetBeans project for nine years and is co-author of "NetBeans: The Definitive Guide" from O'Reilly and Associates, and "Rich Client Programming" from Addison Wesley.

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#1
Christopher Judd commented on 27 Jun 2008

Nice article. But I am surprised you did not mention the upcoming Groovy support when you mentioned the upcoming PHP support.


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