![]() As it turns out, Microsoft have copied some of the core concepts from BlueJ for Visual Studio, but they were late - they only did this a couple of years ago - and then they stuffed it all up by excluding this functionality from their free, entry-level version of their system. When we started, I thought we'd have a head start of a couple of years maybe, and then Microsoft would bring out their own equivalent system and muscle us out of the market. I am actually quite surprised about this. I guess one challenge for small or community-driven projects is to provide the stability and professional-level support that we are doing for BlueJ. class file is run and the main method is automatically executed by the jre. ![]() Java programs are executed the way you execute any program on a computer. You can see that if you use IDEs like JCreator or NetBeans. BlueJ is an educational development environment for programming in Java and Stride. In real life, Java programs are not run the way you do in BlueJ. I am not sure why they didn't really take off. The latest Tweets from BlueJ - The Educational Java IDE (BlueJIDE). I have seen a couple of projects like that over the years, one for C#, and another one as an Eclipse plugin for Java, but they seem to have died again, from what I can see. Q: Is there an equivalent project using C# as a base language or Eclipse as a base IDE? I mainly use Java, and just remember a few key differences about C# - when those are in my head I can happily swap between the two. Repository Configuration Guide covers CVS and Subversion. With that in mind, if you are just getting started then there's no harm in getting started in Java rather than C# - the switch to C# after doing Java for a while should be pretty easy, and a lot of the skills that you learn with Java - both on the OO front and syntactically (beacuse of the languages' similarities!) will also apply to C#. BlueJ Teamwork Tutorial (2.0, English PDF) for Subversion and (for pre-BlueJ 4.0.0) CVS. It's not an IDE you stick with for years at all, it's there to get you started in the best way possible. However, I'm curious as to why you're so dead set on having one for C# and not Java? BlueJ is designed for beginners to get them into a good OO mindset from the word go, and that it does very well. If you need to switch back to the default light theme of BlueJ, you can follow the above procedure and select bluej-default-theme in step-3, or, you can make a copy of the original stylesheets folder before installing the new theme.I certainly don't know of any, and I'd be fairly confident in an outright no - at least at this stage.The editor and terminal windows should have the new theme. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |