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If you are used to using JBuilder you're going to wan't an IDE. Once you've istalled the JDK from sun or Blackdown get Sun One Studio 4. The community edition is free. You can get it at the location below but you must register first.
If you used JBuilder on Windows before, then why not still use JBuilder on Linux.
There is "JBuilder personal edition" for linux which u can freely download from
Originally posted by mhchavez99 If you are used to using JBuilder you're going to wan't an IDE. Once you've istalled the JDK from sun or Blackdown get Sun One Studio 4. The community edition is free. You can get it at the location below but you must register first.
Sun One Studio 4 Community edition no longer exists. Sun droped it.
But you still can use "Netbeans" which is almost the same as Sun one community edition.
Last edited by moeminhtun; 07-28-2003 at 04:27 AM.
(I hope that this is the right place to ask this) I have installed the J2RE-1_4_1_07? ver of Java for Netscape and Mozilla (in RH 9.0) and still can't get either brower to reconignise it. I put in in the "Plug-in's" folder and installed it free. What am I doing wrong?
Originally posted by J.Q. Monkey I guess I'll be the jack*ss to point out there is no java compiler....
I have to say that you are actually wrong. Java is a half-interpreted and half-compiled language. Some compilers now can compile Java to machine code. GCJ is an example of it. Although, GCJ won't compile anything that uses Swing (or any other graphical classes) included in Java it works just fine. So, there really are java compilers around....
I stand corrected then. I haven't played with Java since my first year programming classes and I know my school uses an interpreter. Being the fool I am I believed the instructors when they said thats all Java could use. For as much money as I pay they should know what they are talking about.
If it makes you feel any better, I've just finished my Java class and it was pretty expensive, and I had to work and study at the same time, since I'm married and have a kid . And my teachers never pointed out that java could actually be compiled into machine code . I've found it out in this forum, and it really can be done. I'm with you J.Q. Monkey, I wonder how those guys can be promoted into a teacher/instructor... whatever
Thank all of you for the responses, J.Q. I don't consider you to be a J@ck@ss, however, I still have a problem, how do I get netscape @ mozilla to recognize the Java Plug-in that I put on my machine?
(I'm trying to figure out a way to get Yahoo games to run with the browers)
if you're using a recent version of Mozilla you need at least 1.4.2 for it to work. Then, assuming the following:
1) you are root or can write to the mozilla plugins folder
2) java is installed at /usr/java/j2sdk1.4.2_02
3) mozilla is installed at /usr/local/mozilla
4) you have gcc 3.2.x
restart mozilla and enter "about:plugins" in the address bar, and look for the Java plugin... if it's there it works... if you are using a prior version of gcc (check with gcc --version) then use the plugin .so file in .../plugin/i386/ns610 instead. I have this working on the firefox nightly from Feb. 17th.
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