Ant: http://jakarta.apache.org/ant/
EJBDoclet: http://www.dreambean.com/ejbdoclet.html
JUnit: http://www.junit.org/
XP: http://www.xprogramming.com/ (Not a tool but a development methodology)
UltraEdit: http://www.ultraedit.com/

    I fully endorse and encourage the use of Ant, EJBDoclet, and JUnit.
They're all incredible tools.  UltraEdit, well... it's a nice Notepad
replacement but hardly an editor.
    As for Extreme Programming, it's certainly appropriately named.  I
wonder if anyone's actually adopted the process in it's entirety.  I think
anyone doing "internet" development these days is doing something "loosely
based on XP" whether they realize it or not.

--
Jason Rimmer              "If it isn't true, it should be,
[EMAIL PROTECTED]           and if we could afford it, it would be."


----- Original Message -----
From: "Guilherme Ceschiatti" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Orion-Interest" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2000 1:23 PM
Subject: Re: SV: Off topic: development tools


> On Tuesday 12 December 2000 01:47, Chris Bartling wrote:
> > I'm using EJBDoclet and Apache Ant 1.2 for my EJB development with
Orion.
> > Easy to setup and use, extensible (both EJBDoclet and Ant allow
extension
> > by subclass/interface implementation).  I also use JUnit for all EJB
unit
> > tests (testing home and remote interfaces) and integration tests.  Total
> > cost: $0. All of these tools are open source and support our lightweight
> > development process, loosely based on XP.
> >
> > As for the IDE, I use UltraEdit-32 for Java files and HomeSite 4.5.1 for
> > JSP work.  All seems to work well together.  From my standpoint, I want
a
> > repeatable deployment process, all these tools used in conjunction give
me
> > that.
>
> Hi, Chirs.
>
> Could you please send the URL's of these apps?
>
> []s
> Guilherme Ceschiatti
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>


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