Henke, Most commercial IDEs have bean development capabilities. JBuilder and Visual Cafe seem to be the most popular among them. They can help you develop any type of beans. Java Beans and EJBs as well. If your new to developing beans, I would suggest you start with that application that most of us started with: Notepad on Win(cough) and Emacs on Unix based platforms (VI people plz dont take my Emacs vote incorrectly, I just mean that it is the best tool on a Unix box :) -Tim
-----Original Message----- From: Henrik Johansson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, November 09, 2001 8:29 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Dev. app. for beans Hi! What app are you using when developing beans? /Henke =========================================================================== To unsubscribe: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "signoff JSP-INTEREST". For digest: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "set JSP-INTEREST DIGEST". Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at: http://archives.java.sun.com/jsp-interest.html http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/faq.html http://www.esperanto.org.nz/jsp/jspfaq.jsp http://www.jguru.com/faq/index.jsp http://www.jspinsider.com =========================================================================== To unsubscribe: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "signoff JSP-INTEREST". For digest: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "set JSP-INTEREST DIGEST". Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at: http://archives.java.sun.com/jsp-interest.html http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/faq.html http://www.esperanto.org.nz/jsp/jspfaq.jsp http://www.jguru.com/faq/index.jsp http://www.jspinsider.com