7 Eclipse Killer Features; 5 Eclipse Annoyances
This is my OLD blog. I've copied this post over to my NEW blog at:
http://www.saltycrane.com/blog/2007/07/7-eclipse-killer-features-5-eclipse/
You should be redirected in 2 seconds.
Here are my pros and cons after using Eclipse for about a year. I've been using mostly 3.2 and recently updated to version 3.3. For the most part it is great. There are some annoyances that hopefully can be fixed. Maybe I need to learn Java and start working on the code. I've also thought about switching to Emacs. I used Emacs for a short time on a Solaris box and liked it a lot. I can't seem to make the switch now, though, because a.) it's not pretty enough, and b.) I don't want to take the time to learn it again.
Eclipse Killer Features:
- Search across entire workspace for selected text with CTRL+ALT+G. It's the fastest interface I've used for selected text, it organizes the search results, highlights all items, and shows pretty markers in the margin. (see below.)
- Pretty markers to show search items, compile errors/warnings, modified text, bookmarks, etc.
- Code completion with CTRL+SPACE. It is pretty.
- Automatic variable renaming with ALT+SHIFT+R. It's faster and more reliable than search and replace.
- Good keyboard support. "Quick Access" is a very nice addition in Eclipse 3.3. Hit CTRL+3 and then type the name of any Eclipse command. (See Quick Access (Ctrl+3) is bliss! for more info.) To open a file, hit CTRL+SHIFT+R and type in the name of the file. The dialog provides filename completion. Fast.
- Good integration with SVN using Subclipse: allows me to compare revisions, view the repository history, open an old revision next to my working copy, and take a glance at pretty file icons to tell me the state of files. (This no longer applies since I switched to Mercurial.)
- Put views almost anywhere you want (docked, detached, fast view). Switch between editors with CTRL+F6, switch between views with CTRL+F7, and switch between perspectives with CTRL+F7.
Eclipse Annoyances:
- Can't open a file from the command line.
- It is slow. In this article, Stevey Yegge even wrote a Eclipse haiku about it:
startApplication()
It's a great article, btw.
thenWaitFriggingForever()
thenItGoesRealSlow() - All the extra decorations take up a lot of screen real estate. (Can't completely customize everything. E.g. can't get rid of the scroll bars.)
- No macros. (This is what Emacs is all about.)
- No (good) Mercurial plugin.
Eclipse vs. Emacs conclusion: Sticking with Eclipse for now because it is prettier (and because I know how to use it.)
1 comment:
it has no macros, but it is now scriptable via eclipse monkey ... which may (or may not) cut it down to 4 annoyances :)
cheers,
eokyere
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