I am lucky, I started using it about a year ago or so when it was
completely free, no limitations.  I still use an old version - that version
is more bare bones (not "160 config items", "only" a few dozen, and no GUI
config piece), but gets the job done well and I am want for naught on it!

Now only if Sun would have run the messy JDK code through something like
this...


> Date: Fri, 3 Nov 2000 13:42:01 -0800
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: RE: Sending the current buffer to a Java application. 
> From: Mike Campbell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
> >>>>> "j" == jeffjensen  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> j> Hi, Good question...Jindent has lots of features.  I suggest reading the
> j> features info on its web site for complete info.
> 
> j> Off-the-top-of-the-head-brief-summary, Emacs' reindenting does not:
> j> - move the opening brace
> j> - add or remove white space lines as specifed
> j> - wrap lines longer than a specified column, reindenting them appropriately
> j> - add javadoc templates where no javadoc exists for the class and above
> j> each method
> j> - line up variable names in a list of declarations
> 
> Nifty program. Not sure it's worth a minimum of $49 to *me*, but I
> guess that's what makes a free market so nice. =)
> 
> 

Reply via email to