- Test Center Tracker: Packeteer sizzles at CIFS; RIA development heats up
- Managing Switches for Policy-Based Networking
- Preview: Globalpex's content certification uniquely verifies physical content in the envelope
- Standards? What Standards?
- Test Center Tracker: Bridging technology and finance
- Preview: Parallels Server beta looks promising
- Test Center Tracker: Greener docs and a six-month itch
- A NAC for policy enforcement: Lockdown Networks, RIP
- Train Signal knows training.
- Test Center Tracker: Sticky sweet Sun storage, plus a hardy Ubuntu beta
November 20, 2006 | Comments: (0)
Preview: NetBeans 5.5
Sun shipped Version 5.5 of its NetBeans development environment in early November, giving the IDE -- which is certainly the most important competitor to Eclipse -- some significant and unique enterprise capabilities beyond those of the 5.0 release.
This version is the first Java IDE to so fully support Java EE 5, the replacement specification for J2EE. In addition to built-in API support, code completion, and tutorials for the new enterprise Java, NetBeans 5.5 offers support for the new Enterprise Java Beans 3.0 (EJB) session beans, including on-the-fly error checking. In terms of tool integration, version 5.5 integrates with Subversion source-code management software.
Java's new, simplified persistence layer gets new wizards for full CRUD code generation, as well as the ability to generate Java entity classes directly from existing database schemas. There's similar support for Web services: Wizards and specific IDE capabilities that enable extensive use of annotations deliver what Java enterprise developers have long been waiting for -- a simpler development model with native tools to support it.
Along with Version 5.5, Sun simultaneously released a set of add-on packs that extend NetBeans in new directions. The Enterprise pack, for example, has XML schema tools, a WSDL editor, and an advanced BPEL 2.0 editor (see screenshot) that facilitates Web services orchestration. Another pack extends NetBeans' reach in the mobile market by providing support for SVG graphics on handheld devices and for an increased number of mobile device platforms.
Finally, Sun also released a C/C++ pack update. It replaces Sun's earlier cpp and cpplite products and brings C/C++ development to Windows, Linux, and Solaris. Although this pack is technically a preview (it's at Beta 3), I found it a substantial, portable platform for developing, debugging, and building C and C++ applications.
NetBeans 5.5
Available: Now
Pricing: Free
Verdict: NetBeans has the most complete support for Java EE 5 of the open-source Java IDEs. It's an impressive collection of tools; developers contemplating enterprise Java applications should evaluate NetBeans before any other products. It is likely all they will need.
Posted by Andrew Binstock on November 20, 2006 10:29 AM
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