Integrated development environment
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- Anjuta-2.0.0-2.png -
Anjuta, a C and C++ IDE for the GNOME environment
In
computing, an
integrated development environment (
IDE) is a
software application that provides comprehensive facilities to
computer programmers for
software development. An IDE normally consists of a
source code editor, a
compiler and/or
interpreter,
build automation tools, and (usually) a
debugger. Sometimes a
version control system and various tools are integrated to simplify the construction of a
GUI. Many modern IDEs also have a
class browser, an
object inspector, and a
class hierarchy diagram, for use with
object oriented software development.IDEs are designed to maximize programmer productivity by providing tightly-knit components with similar
user interfaces. This should mean that the programmer has much less
mode switching to do than when using discrete development programs. However, because an IDE is by its very nature a complicated piece of software, this high productivity only occurs after a long learning time.Typically an IDE is dedicated to a specific
programming language, so as to provide a feature set which most closely matches the
programming paradigms of the language. However, some multiple-language IDEs are in use, such as
Eclipse,
ActiveState Komodo, recent versions of
NetBeans,
Microsoft Visual Studio, and
CodeGear RAD Studio.
Design
An IDE is a contrast to unrelated command-line tools, such as
vi,
GCC or
make. IDEs typically present a single program in which all development is done. This program typically provides many features for authoring, modifying, compiling, deploying and debugging software. The aim is to abstract the configuration necessary to piece together command line utilities in a cohesive unit, which theoretically reduces the time to learn a language, and increases developer productivity. It is also thought that the tight integration of development tasks can further increase productivity. For example, code can be compiled while being written, providing instant feedback on syntax errors. While most modern IDEs are graphical, IDEs in use before the advent of windowing systems (such as
Microsoft Windows or
X11) were text-based, using function keys or
hotkeys to perform various tasks (
Turbo Pascal is a common example).
History
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- Emacs-screenshot.png -
GNU Emacs, an extensible editor which is commonly used as an IDE on Unix-like systems
IDEs initially became necessary when doing development in front of a console or terminal. Early languages did not have one, since they were prepared using flowcharts, coding forms, and keypunches before being submitted to a compiler.
Dartmouth BASIC was the first language to be created with an IDE (and was also the first to be designed for use while sitting in front of a console or terminal). Its IDE (part of the
Dartmouth Time Sharing System) was command-based, and therefore did not look much like the menu-driven, graphical IDEs of today. However it seamlessly integrated editing, file management, compilation, debugging and execution in the manner characteristic of a modern IDE.One of the first IDEs with a plug-in concept was
Softbench. In 1995 Computerwoche commented that the use of an IDE was not well received by developers since it wouldfence in their creativity.
Visual programming
There is growing interest in
visual programming (not to be confused with
Visual Basic or
Visual C++). Visual IDEs allow users to create new applications by moving programming building blocks or code nodes to create flowcharts or structure diagrams which are then compiled or interpreted. These flowcharts often are based on the
Unified Modeling Language.This interface has been popularized with the
Lego Mindstorms system, and is being actively pursued by a number of companies wishing to capitalize on the power of custom browsers like those found at
Mozilla, and the power of
distributed programming (cf.
LabVIEW software). An early visual programming system,
Max, was modelled after analog
synthesizer design and has been used to develop real-time music performance software since the 1980s. Another early example was
Prograph, a
dataflow-based system originally developed for the
Macintosh. The graphical programming environment "Grape" is used to program
qfix robot kits.This approach is also used in specialist software such as
Openlab, where the end users want the flexibility of a full programming language, without the traditional learning curve associated with one.An
open source visual programming system is Mindscript, which has extended functionality for
cryptology,
database interfacing, etc.
Language support
Eclipse, an example of a multiple-language IDE, has
Java as a base installed language. It also has
plugins for
C/
C++,
Python,
Perl,
Ruby,
Groovy,
Fortran,
Cobol,
PHP,
JSP/
Servlet,
J2EE,
OOD/
OOP design tools and many more plugins. These all can be installed on the same IDE at the same time. They all have their own debugger and integrated IDE options, which sometimes leads to grave inconsistencies in the user interface itself due to the overwhelming amount of customizability and keyboard shortcuts.
Attitudes across different computing platforms
Many
Unix programmers argue that traditional
command-line POSIX tools constitute an IDE, though one with a different style of interface and under the Unix environment. Many programmers still use
makefiles and their derivatives. Also, many Unix programmers use
Emacs or
Vim, which integrate support for many of the standard Unix build tools.
Data Display Debugger is intended to be an advanced graphical front-end for many text-based
debugger standard tools.Under
Microsoft Windows, command-line tools for development are little known. So, there are many commercial and non-commercial solutions, but each has a different design and so they tend to have compatibility problems. Yet, all major compiler vendors for Windows provide free copies of their command-line tools, including
Microsoft (
Visual C++ free version,
Platform SDK, Microsoft
.NET Framework SDK,
nmake utility),
CodeGear (
bcc32 compiler,
make utility), and
GNU (
gcc,
gdb,
GNU make).IDEs have always been popular on
Mac OS, going back to
Macintosh Programmer's Workshop,
Turbo Pascal and
THINK C environments in the mid-1980s. Currently Mac OS X programmers can choose between a few IDEs, including native IDEs like
Xcode, older IDEs like
CodeWarrior, and open-source tools, such as
Eclipse and Netbeans.
ActiveState Komodo is a proprietary IDE supported on Mac OS.Some open-source IDEs such as Eclipse and Netbeans, which themselves are developed with a cross-platform language (Java), run on multiple platforms including Windows, Linux, and Mac OS.
See also
References
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