Re: Information about Android development with Netbeans 11.2

2020-02-27 Thread Gail Anderson
Hi Gabriel,

One option is using the Gluon Mobile Framework, which is JavaFX-based, and 
GraalVM to create native images. This runs natively on Android, iOS, Mac OS, 
and Linux (Windows coming). There is also a stand-alone drag and drop UI 
configuration tool, Scene Builder, that generates FXML, the markup that 
provides the “view” for MVC for JavaFX.

Thus, you get performant cross-platform, one code base development for mobile 
and/or desktop.

I use this to create mobile apps with NetBeans/Maven.

More info: https://gluonhq.com/products/mobile/ 


—Gail Anderson

> On Feb 27, 2020, at 10:01 AM, Gabriel Mometti 
>  wrote:
> 
> I just want to ask , if it’s possible, what kind of environment i need to 
> envelop Android applications with Netbeans 11.2. 



Re: Information about Android development with Netbeans 11.2

2020-02-27 Thread Emilian Bold
See https://github.com/NBANDROIDTEAM/NBANDROID-V2

--emi

On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 8:01 PM Gabriel Mometti
 wrote:
>
> I just want to ask , if it’s possible, what kind of environment i need to 
> envelop Android applications with Netbeans 11.2.

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Re: Delivery Status Notification (Failure)

2020-02-27 Thread Emilian Bold
I think the latest development happens at
https://github.com/NBANDROIDTEAM/NBANDROID-V2

--emi

On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 9:08 PM Alonso Del Arte
 wrote:
>
> I'm wondering about this myself. From what I can gather:
>
> There is a NetBeans 8.0 plugin for Android: 
> http://plugins.netbeans.org/plugin/19545/nbandroid but the developers' 
> website seems to be down...
> The device simulator is a separate thing, but it shouldn't be too difficult 
> to "wire" it in.
> You have to use Java, can't use Kotlin because the Kotlin plugin is still in 
> limbo. Probably can't use Scala either. And in any case, you might like Java 
> better anyway.
> I think NetBeans has no problem with XML (and Android still seems to heavily 
> rely on XML), but it might not give you as much WYSIWYG help as Android 
> Studio.
>
> Hope this helps at least a little bit, but your mileage will vary.
>
> Al
>
> On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 2:07 PM Mail Delivery Subsystem 
>  wrote:
>>
>> Address not found
>>
>> Your message wasn't delivered to gabriel.mome...@yahoo.com.invalid because 
>> the domain yahoo.com.invalid couldn't be found. Check for typos or 
>> unnecessary spaces and try again.
>> The response was:
>>
>> DNS Error: 607969 DNS type 'mx' lookup of yahoo.com.invalid responded with 
>> code NXDOMAIN Domain name not found: yahoo.com.invalid
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> -- Forwarded message --
>> From: Alonso Del Arte 
>> To: Gabriel Mometti 
>> Cc:
>> Bcc:
>> Date: Thu, 27 Feb 2020 14:07:23 -0500
>> Subject: Re: Information about Android development with Netbeans 11.2
>> I'm wondering about this myself. From what I can gather:
>>
>> There is a NetBeans 8.0 plugin for Android: 
>> http://plugins.netbeans.org/plugin/19545/nbandroid but the developers' 
>> website seems to be down...
>> The device simulator is a separate thing, but it shouldn't be too difficult 
>> to "wire" it in.
>> You have to use Java, can't use Kotlin because the Kotlin plugin is still in 
>> limbo. Probably can't use Scala either. And in any case, you might like Java 
>> better anyway.
>> I think NetBeans has no problem with XML (and Android still seems to heavily 
>> rely on XML), but it might not give you as much WYSIWYG help as Android 
>> Studio.
>>
>> Hope this helps at least a little bit, but your mileage will vary.
>>
>> Al
>>
>> On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 1:01 PM Gabriel Mometti 
>>  wrote:
>>>
>>> I just want to ask , if it’s possible, what kind of environment i need to 
>>> envelop Android applications with Netbeans 11.2.
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Alonso del Arte
>> Author at SmashWords.com
>> Musician at ReverbNation.com
>
>
>
> --
> Alonso del Arte
> Author at SmashWords.com
> Musician at ReverbNation.com

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Re: Delivery Status Notification (Failure)

2020-02-27 Thread Alonso Del Arte
 I'm wondering about this myself. From what I can gather:

   - There is a NetBeans 8.0 plugin for Android:
   http://plugins.netbeans.org/plugin/19545/nbandroid but the developers'
   website seems to be down...
   - The device simulator is a separate thing, but it shouldn't be too
   difficult to "wire" it in.
   - You have to use Java, can't use Kotlin because the Kotlin plugin is
   still in limbo. Probably can't use Scala either. And in any case, you might
   like Java better anyway.
   - I think NetBeans has no problem with XML (and Android still seems to
   heavily rely on XML), but it might not give you as much WYSIWYG help as
   Android Studio.

Hope this helps at least a little bit, but your mileage will vary.

Al

On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 2:07 PM Mail Delivery Subsystem <
mailer-dae...@googlemail.com> wrote:

> [image: Error Icon]
> Address not found
> Your message wasn't delivered to *gabriel.mome...@yahoo.com.invalid*
> because the domain yahoo.com.invalid couldn't be found. Check for typos or
> unnecessary spaces and try again.
> The response was:
>
> DNS Error: 607969 DNS type 'mx' lookup of yahoo.com.invalid responded with
> code NXDOMAIN Domain name not found: yahoo.com.invalid
>
>
>
> -- Forwarded message --
> From: Alonso Del Arte 
> To: Gabriel Mometti 
> Cc:
> Bcc:
> Date: Thu, 27 Feb 2020 14:07:23 -0500
> Subject: Re: Information about Android development with Netbeans 11.2
> I'm wondering about this myself. From what I can gather:
>
>- There is a NetBeans 8.0 plugin for Android:
>http://plugins.netbeans.org/plugin/19545/nbandroid but the developers'
>website seems to be down...
>- The device simulator is a separate thing, but it shouldn't be too
>difficult to "wire" it in.
>- You have to use Java, can't use Kotlin because the Kotlin plugin is
>still in limbo. Probably can't use Scala either. And in any case, you might
>like Java better anyway.
>- I think NetBeans has no problem with XML (and Android still seems to
>heavily rely on XML), but it might not give you as much WYSIWYG help as
>Android Studio.
>
> Hope this helps at least a little bit, but your mileage will vary.
>
> Al
>
> On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 1:01 PM Gabriel Mometti
>  wrote:
>
>> I just want to ask , if it’s possible, what kind of environment i need to
>> envelop Android applications with Netbeans 11.2.
>>
>
>
> --
> Alonso del Arte
> Author at SmashWords.com
> 
> Musician at ReverbNation.com 
>


-- 
Alonso del Arte
Author at SmashWords.com

Musician at ReverbNation.com 


Information about Android development with Netbeans 11.2

2020-02-27 Thread Gabriel Mometti
I just want to ask , if it’s possible, what kind of environment i need to 
envelop Android applications with Netbeans 11.2. 

Re: Apache Netbeans 11.2 Availablility for ARM64 (Raspberry Pi 4B)?

2020-02-27 Thread Hans Grimmelshausen HG

Hello,

In NB 11's menu Tools -> Plugins, tab Settings, please enable in the left 
option list the "Netbeans 8.2 Plugin Portal".
Then go to the tab "Available Plugins", press the update button and then 
install the "C/C++" plug-in.
The C, C++, Fortran bits work then also under NB 11. (At least here on Debian 
based Ubuntu Linux, where the GNU C compiler gcc is pre-installed.)


This could also work on a Pi's Raspbian Linux, but you would have to test it 
first.


For standard Java 2 SE things, excluding the Profiler like Emilian wrote, NB 
should work smoothly also on the Pi's Raspbian, too. At least it did when I 
used it on a Pi3 some time ago.


For non-standard things like JavaFX, you would have to install JavaFX for the 
ARM/Pi first. This part was easier with early JDK 8 versions, which came with 
JavaFX included also on the Pi.


Another possibility to use NB for the Raspbian Pi, as long as you have a 
"big" desktop machine running, would be to use NB's cool feature "Java 
Platform" -> "Remote Java Standard Edition". This way NB runs on your "big" 
desktop machine and just remote copies the project's classes/jars to the Pi 
and starts it remotely there. But since a 4 GB RAM Pi4 is fast enough, I 
think using NB directly on the Pi is much more straightforward.


Greetings,
Hans


Am 26.02.20 um 21:07 schrieb Emilian Bold:

NetBeans 11.2 does not come with the C/C++ plugins, but I guess you
can take those somewhere else.

That being said, although 95% of NetBeans is basically Java (so,
crossplatform) and the scripts only assume something Linux-like (so,
hardware arch independent) there is some native code in there. For
example, the Java profiler has some. JavaFX has some. I would not go so
far as to say NetBeans 100% works on ARM64. But... for your needs I
expect it would.

--emi



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