At 08:56 PM 2/25/02 +0000, Phillip Lord wrote:
> >>>>> "Troy" == Troy Daniels <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>   Troy> At 01:30 PM 2/25/02 -0500, Paul Kinnucan wrote:
>   >> John Cobo writes: > Paul,
>   >> >
>   >> > Am I correct in thinking that your JDEE allows a single set up
>   >> of >the JDK, Emacs, Tomcat, Web server, any shared JAR, WAR files
>   >> for >the development team, etc. on a shared server.  Developers
>   >> can >then 'simply' access the environment through a window on to
>   >> the >server ?
>
>
>   Troy> At my company, the Unix disks can be mounted on the PC using
>   Troy> samba, so that it looks like a network drive.  I then run
>   Troy> emacs on my PC, and can read and compile the files on the Unix
>   Troy> disk.  Actually running the code requires a window on the Unix
>   Troy> machine*.  This may work better or worse, depending on (at
>   Troy> least) the availability of samba, and whether the net lag is
>   Troy> worse for interacting with emacs or for writting the class
>   Troy> files.
>
>         Another possibility would be to have a go with TRAMP, which
>is ange-ftp for the new millenium. I use it across ssh, which works
>very well.
>
>         I've not tried it on windows though, and I don't know how
>much JDE functionality it would break. I'd be interested to know.

I expect that it breaks compiling and running.  Assuming it uses 
ange-ftp-style names,  c:\jdk1.3.1\javac \\user@host:\dir\file.java is 
unlikely to succeed.  :-)

Troy

>         Phil
>
>

Troy Daniels
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
781-273-3388 x218

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