Thanks!

from the logic it must have been from Plugins Portal 8.2 – which I've
not recognized, but I can not see the version or the source, as these
informations are hidden from the new plugin manager in "User Installed
Plugins".

-Ulf

Am 19.04.19 um 13:11 schrieb Geertjan Wielenga:
> You must have installed the C/C++ features yourself since Apache
> NetBeans does not provide C/C++ features.
>
> Gj
>
> On Fri, 19 Apr 2019 at 05:03, Ulf Zibis <ulf.zi...@cosoco.de
> <mailto:ulf.zi...@cosoco.de>> wrote:
>
>     Thanks for your hint Geertjan.
>
>     I'm surprised. I don't remember from where I've installed the
>     C/C++ plugin, and I can't see the source in the plugin, as all is
>     hidden behind "User Installed Plugins".
>     What you wanted to say with: "... or you must have ..."?
>
>     -Ulf
>
>     Am 18.04.19 um 00:14 schrieb Geertjan Wielenga:
>>     NetBeans 10.0 does not support C/C++. You've probably installed
>>     plugins from 8.2, or you must have, which may or may not work,
>>     i.e., you're using untested features, and there's no promise that
>>     this will work.
>>
>>     Gj
>>
>>     On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 6:12 PM Ulf Zibis <ulf.zi...@cosoco.de
>>     <mailto:ulf.zi...@cosoco.de>> wrote:
>>
>>         A polite Ping!
>>
>>         -Ulf
>>
>>         Am 12.04.19 um 17:27 schrieb Ulf Zibis:
>>>
>>>         Hi,
>>>
>>>         I have a C-project here, a clone from the famous FFmpeg:
>>>
>>>         git clone git://source.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg 
>>> <http://source.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg> <target>
>>>
>>>         make creates 2 binaries, ffmpeg and ffmpeg_g, the latter
>>>         with debug symbols.
>>>
>>>         When I use the latter with Debug Project, I expect the
>>>         processing would stop at a set Breakpoint in the source
>>>         file, but that doesn't happen.
>>>
>>>         Any idea why?
>>>
>>>         I'm running NetBeans IDE 10 on Ubuntu 18.04
>>>
>>>         -Ulf
>>>

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