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1120 of 40 results
102.
<application>MIT/GNU Scheme</application> is an implementation of the Scheme programming language, providing an interpreter, compiler, source-code debugger, integrated Emacs-like editor, and a large run-time library. It is best suited to programming large applications with a rapid development cycle. It is at version 9.10 and is under the GPL license.
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Located in ../docs/development/C/development.xml:283(para)
103.
The MIT home page of the Scheme language is <ulink url="http://groups.csail.mit.edu/mac/projects/scheme"> here</ulink>. Scheme is a statically scoped and properly tail-recursive dialect of the Lisp programming language invented by Guy Lewis Steele Jr. and Gerald Jay Sussman. It was designed to have an exceptionally clear and simple semantics and few different ways to form expressions. A wide variety of programming paradigms, including imperative, functional, and message passing styles, find convenient expression in Scheme.
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Located in ../docs/development/C/development.xml:286(para)
104.
Scheme was one of the first programming languages to incorporate first class procedures as in the lambda calculus, thereby proving the usefulness of static scope rules and block structure in a dynamically typed language. Scheme was the first major dialect of Lisp to distinguish procedures from lambda expressions and symbols, to use a single lexical environment for all variables, and to evaluate the operator position of a procedure call in the same way as an operand position. By relying entirely on procedure calls to express iteration, Scheme emphasized the fact that tail-recursive procedure calls are essentially goto's that pass arguments. Scheme was the first widely used programming language to embrace first class escape procedures, from which all previously known sequential control structures can be synthesized. More recently, building upon the design of generic arithmetic in Common Lisp, Scheme introduced the concept of exact and inexact numbers. Scheme is also the first programming language to support hygienic macros, which permit the syntax of a block-structured language to be extended reliably.
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Located in ../docs/development/C/development.xml:289(para)
107.
<application>Monkey Studio (MkS)</application> is a cross platform IDE written in C++/Qt 4. Its primary goal was to be a Qt 4 only IDE, but it evolved beyond only Qt development. The current version is the v2 branch which succeeded the v1 branch and is dependent on Qt 4.4.0 or greater. It supports Qt 4 projects management and embeds Designer and Assistant to form a complete, fast and power full Qt 4 IDE.
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Located in ../docs/development/C/development.xml:299(para)
112.
<application>MonoDevelop</application> is an IDE primarily designed for C# and other .NET languages. MonoDevelop enables developers to quickly write desktop and ASP.NET Web applications on Linux, Windows and Mac OSX. MonoDevelop makes it easy for developers to port .NET applications created with Visual Studio to Linux and to maintain a single code base for all platforms. It brings a clone of Microsoft's .NET API to the Linux desktop. It is at version 2.4. The MonoDevelop Core is licensed under the LGPLv2, though much of the code and addins are licensed under the MIT/X11 license.
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Located in ../docs/development/C/development.xml:316(para)
113.
MonoDevelop does not contain a visual designer, so C# bindings to the GUI designer components of GTK+ were created to allow for the creation of graphical user interfaces. These bindings are collectively called "GTK#", or GTK Sharp. The parts of .NET which are legally allowed in Mono are defined in the <ulink url="http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-334.htm">EMCA 334</ulink>, which covers the C# specifications, and the <ulink url="http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-335.htm">EMCA 335</ulink> standard, which covers the CLI specifications. A license must be obtained from Microsoft to use the tools described in these two standards to create a <ulink url="http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/files/ECMA-ST/Ecma PATENT/ECMA-334 &amp; 335/ECMA-335 4th Edition patent statements.pdf">commercial application</ulink>. Microsoft expanded on its EMCA offerings with a <ulink url="http://www.microsoft.com/interop/cp/default.mspx"><quote>Community Promise</quote></ulink>(CP), which adds several technologies to those listed in ECMA 334 and 335. Some specifications include special terms, which are are noted. The CP applies to anyone who is building software and-or hardware to implement one or more of those specifications. The CP does not apply to any work that you do beyond the scope of the covered specifications.
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Located in ../docs/development/C/development.xml:319(para)
114.
Also, in specified cases (such as where the specifications have uses that exceed those needed to achieve the interoperability needs for which the release under the CP is being made), the CP may have special terms concerning what kinds of implementations are covered. <emphasis>Microsoft is the sole adjudicator</emphasis> in determining if an application conforms to the EMCA and CP, or not, and commercial applications built using Mono may require a license from Microsoft. It would be prudent to consult an attorney specializing in Intellectual Property Rights and contact Microsoft for specific information before beginning development.
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Located in ../docs/development/C/development.xml:322(para)
117.
<application>NetBeans IDE 6.9</application> is an award-winning integrated development environment available for Windows, Mac and Linux. The NetBeans project consists of a free open-source IDE and an application platform that enable developers to rapidly create web, enterprise, desktop, and mobile applications using the Java platform, as well as JavaFX, PHP, JavaScript and Ajax, Ruby and Ruby on Rails, Groovy and Grails, and C/C++. NetBeans IDE 6.9 introduces the JavaFX Composer, support for JavaFX SDK 1.3, OSGi interoperability, support for the PHP Zend framework and Ruby on Rails 3.0, and more. Like most modern IDE's it extends its capabilities by using the plugin paradigm and because of its long period of development and large number of users who contributed to its development, there are hundreds of plugins available. The majority of the NetBeans IDE code is available under a dual license consisting of the Common Development and Distribution License (CDDL) v1.0 and the GNU General Public License (GPL) v2. No license fee is required to use NetBeans and any commercial application you write does not have to be distributed with the source. Sun no longer exists, having been purchased by Oracle, which now controls Java.
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Located in ../docs/development/C/development.xml:332(para)
118.
Java was the original <quote>write once, run anywhere</quote> language tool. However, despite its <quote>superior security model</quote> it has become a favorite target for malware and many security experts are recommending uninstalling Java all together. These security concerns and the lawsuit have taken the shine off of Java development for many coders and corporations.
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Located in ../docs/development/C/development.xml:335(para)
121.
<application>Padre</application> is a text editor that is simple to use for new Perl programmers but also supports large multi-lingual and multi-technology projects. Its primary focus is to create a peerless environment for learning Perl and creating Perl scripts, modules and distributions, with an extensible plug-in system to support the addition of related functionality and languages and to support advanced developers taking the editor anywhere they want it to go. It runs on Microsoft Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, Mac OS X and NetBSD and is under the GPL and the Artistic licenses. Perl is often used as a binder between disparate components in an application or project and is noted for being easy to write but difficult to read. Padre has all the features one would expect in a well supported IDE. It was written using Perl5.
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Located in ../docs/development/C/development.xml:347(para)
1120 of 40 results

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Contributors to this translation: Max_ym, Yuri Chornoivan, yurchor.