> > On 05/03/2010 08:48 AM Kwan Lowe wrote: >> On Mon, May 3, 2010 at 8:26 AM, Massey, Ricky <ricky.massey at lmco.com> >> wrote: >>> Try kdevelop. >> >> Will second this... It comes with project templates for anything from >> a simple shell "helloworld" to full blown GUI apps. > > Nobody's mentioned glade2-- or as its listed in the gnome menu, "Glade > Interface Designer". It's a drag-and-drop GUI for creating windowed > apps. I.e., you select which widgets you want and drop them onto a > window, configure them, and then use whatever editor you want to create > the back-end code. Glade creates your app's code in variety of > different programming languages, C included. Interesting. > > For an editor I use emacs because I can use it for just about anything vi. > from creating plain text, shell scripts, html docs, and C code. Emacs > isn't just configurable, it's programmable. You can write code to add > or change the functionality emacs provides. It's been around since the > '60s and isn't likely to go away anytime in the next few decades. I could swear it had only been around since the eighties.... At any rate, yes, emacs, the windowing operating system masquerading as a programmers' editor.... mark "we should take this to alt.religion.editors"