KDevelop: Difference between revisions

From KDE Wiki Sandbox
(Marked this version for translation)
(Balance paranthesis)
Line 12: Line 12:


<!--T:20-->
<!--T:20-->
KDevelop has experienced several rewrites. The first time was with version 3.x by Bernd Gehrmann in 2001<ref>[https://marc.info/?l=kde-core-devel&m=98598814600661&w=2 A new IDE for a new millennium :-) by Bernd Gehrmann]</ref> and the second time was with version 4.x with a more object-oriented architecture in 2009<ref>[https://apaku.wordpress.com/2009/11/29/kdevelop4-moved/ KDevelop4 moved]</ref>.
KDevelop has experienced several rewrites. The first time was with version 3.x by Bernd Gehrmann in 2001<ref><!--(-->[https://marc.info/?l=kde-core-devel&m=98598814600661&w=2 A new IDE for a new millennium :-) by Bernd Gehrmann]</ref> and the second time was with version 4.x with a more object-oriented architecture in 2009<ref>[https://apaku.wordpress.com/2009/11/29/kdevelop4-moved/ KDevelop4 moved]</ref>.


<!--T:21-->
<!--T:21-->

Revision as of 07:15, 4 July 2019

KDevelop Editor view
An Integrated Development Environment (IDE) for MS Windows, Mac OS X and Linux

History (inspired by Wikipedia)

The KDevelop project started in 1998 at the University of Potsdam (Germany). The first released 0.1 was released the same year[1].

KDevelop has experienced several rewrites. The first time was with version 3.x by Bernd Gehrmann in 2001[2] and the second time was with version 4.x with a more object-oriented architecture in 2009[3].

The development of KDevelop 5 started in August 2014 as a port of the KDevelop 4 codebase for qt5 and kf5[4]. The custom c++ parser was abandoned in favor of clang and the CMake interpreter was also replaced in favor of using the JSON metadata given by CMake. KDevelop 5 was released in August 2016[5].

Features[6]

  • Support C, C#, C++, CUDO, OpenCL, Qt QML, Javascript, Python and PHP
  • Support multiple version control systems Git, Bazaar, Subversion, CVS, Mercurial (hg), Perforce
  • Support multiple build system CMake, QMake, Makefile, Meson[7], ...
  • Quick Code Navigation (Jump to declaration/definition)
  • Code comprehension (Syntax highlighting, semantic code completion)
  • Documentation integration

Tips

More Information

References