![]() ![]() Ideally, you'd not only have intelligent code completion, but intelligent refactoring and code metrics. For extra credit, your IDE should be able to handle the client and database layers of your stack, supporting embedded JavaScript, TypeScript, HTML, SQL, JavaServer Pages, Hibernate, and the Java Persistence API.įinally, you would hope that your Java IDE lets you edit, build, debug, and test your systems with ease and grace. Your IDE should be compatible with whatever build and version control systems your development team uses, for example Ant, Maven and/or Gradle, along with Git, SVN, CVS, Mercurial, and/or Bazaar. ![]() You'd also want it to support the major application servers and the most popular web frameworks, including Spring MVC, JSF, Struts, GWT, Play, Wicket, Grails, and Vaadin. ![]() At a minimum, you would hope that your IDE supports Java 8, Scala, Groovy, and any other JVM languages you regularly use.
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