although its worth noting i dont run it on openjdk

On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 3:26 AM, Daniel Skinner <[email protected]> wrote:

> i work in linux as well and intellij works fine all day for me. If
> anything does go wrong (maybe once a month) I get an assertion error in
> event log and need to restart it or things get whacky.
>
>
> On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 3:23 AM, Dmitry Suzdalev <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> IntelliJ IDEA editing facilities are very responsive, and goes quite fast.
>>
>>
>> I use it for my android development and it becomes quite unresponsive
>> after several hours of work. Mostly because it eats more and more memory
>> (leak maybe) or maybe other reasons.
>> I suspect this is because their Linux version isn't as profiled as a
>> Windows one and I work in Linux... But not sure about that, I didn't
>> compare.
>>
>>
>> On 29 July 2014 10:58, David Pérez <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Am Montag, 28. Juli 2014 18:01:09 UTC+2 schrieb Dmitry Suzdalev:
>>>
>>>> Nick,
>>>>
>>>> Thank you for such a detailed answer, it got everything covered! :)
>>>>
>>>> Speaking of IDE's I'd especially like to try to develop not relying on
>>>> IDE. I code in IntelliJ for Android, but when I get away from it and use
>>>> Emacs in my other projects for different languages, I simply get blown away
>>>> by its speed and responsiveness compared to lagging IDE (maybe that's on my
>>>> system only, dunno). Of course IDE has some nice things to it, no doubt,
>>>> but I like performant things so much...
>>>>
>>>> IntelliJ IDEA editing facilities are very responsive, and goes quite
>>> fast.
>>> As Scala is a static typed language, the IDE can help you a lot,
>>> checking syntax on the flight, auto-completion, call hierarchy, ....
>>>
>>>
>>>> I hope that one day gradle will untie me up from IDE in Java-land (it
>>>> already can, but I didn't made the switch yet, due to some deadlines on
>>>> course), but having a superior language (Scala) and not being tied up to a
>>>> particular IDE (sbt/gradle) is even more cool :)
>>>>
>>> From the command line you can compile, launch your app, all except
>>> debugging.
>>>
>>>
>>>>  So I'd like to experiment with this. Google showed that there's a
>>>> good support for Scala-in-Emacs too, so...
>>>>
>>>> As about GC strain, I googled a bit and it seems that in Scala I can
>>>> choose between mutable/immutable collections so this thing is hopefully
>>>> solvable: whenever I identify a bottleneck, it can be optimized.
>>>>
>>>> I think next thing to do is to learn Scala/sbt which should be fun.
>>>>
>>>> Not so hard.  There are some examples.
>>>
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