Hi

There is also the fabric8 Camel forge tooling for Apache Camel
http://fabric8.io/guide/forge.html

As well the maven plugin to validate your Camel endpoints/expressions
http://fabric8.io/guide/camelMavenPlugin.html

The forge tooling works in any IDE such as Eclipse, IDEA or NetBeans.
I recorded a video in the start of the year
http://www.davsclaus.com/2015/12/video-of-apache-camel-tooling-to-edit.html

For graphical drag and drop then there is as you say JBoss Eclipse
tooling for Camel where a new version was recently released that
support Camel 2.17.x
http://lhein.blogspot.se/2016/10/jboss-fuse-tooling-80-for-eclipse-mars.html

The real power of Camel is that you do NOT need any tooling, its just
java, scala, groovy or xml code. The more skilled (Camel) developers I
hear just uses their IDE of choice/

Though for Spring Boot users I do like the auto completion tooling
that IDEA has when editing application.properties where you can get
code assistance to see all the options you can configure, and with
documentation.



On Sun, Oct 23, 2016 at 9:35 PM, Pontus Ullgren <ullg...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I know about JBoss Tools Camel Tooling and been using it. It works great as
> long as we stayed with the RedHat supported versions of Camel and JBoss
> Fuse. But lately we have moved away from this and going with Camel Spring
> Boot and more up to date versions of Camel.
>
> The main reason for this is to get new features faster.
>
> The problem now is that JBoss Tools does not handle this combination well.
> But that is a JBoss specific issue so that is not what I want to discuss
> here. There is other forums for this.
>
> Instead my question: What do you use for developing your Camel based
> applications ?
> I quickly tested Spring Tool Suite which kind of give us most of what we
> look for including good support for gradle. But hope to get some more
> suggestions.
>
> We mostly use the Spring XML DSL to define the routes but also some Java
> DSL.
> Code completion and some tooltips in XML editing mode is a requirement.
> Graphical visualisation and editing of the routes is a bonus but I assume
> that JBoss Tools is the only one that supports this.
>
> Thanks for any insight you can share
> Pontus



-- 
Claus Ibsen
-----------------
http://davsclaus.com @davsclaus
Camel in Action 2: https://www.manning.com/ibsen2

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