god used Eclipse 1.0 to develop universe.

NM
Software Developer - Buenos aires, Argentina.

On Fri, Jun 19, 2009 at 5:44 PM, Martijn Reuvers
<martijn.reuv...@gmail.com>wrote:

> You might want to try Netbeans for UML (there is a single plugin,
> install it and it works fine). I have not had any problems with it, it
> has quite some features (similar to the ones in JDeveloper).
>
> Use SQLDeveloper (of Oracle as well) if you need to replace Toad,
> however keep in mind it does not have all the dba features Toad
> provides, no free tool has these in fact.
>
> Well Apex is Apex, it cannot be replaced easily as its tied so closely
> to the oracle database and its pl/sql.
>
> As soon as you use Maven there is no need anymore for JDeveloper, at
> least not for running/building the project. If you really require
> specific features for instance for Apex you can still create a single
> workspace next to the normal maven one and use that separately.
>
> As for weblogic, just deploy a war manually through its console if you
> need to test it. However for faster testing I'd use Jetty with mvn
> jetty:run (you can always add a weblogic*.xml to the final war to
> override some libraries or so).
>
>
> On Fri, Jun 19, 2009 at 5:26 PM, Dane Laverty<danelave...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > I've really enjoyed getting to use Maven on my recent projects. I'm no
> > Maven expert, but I'm finding that I don't have to be -- it really
> > just does a great job. Getting Maven working with JDeveloper has not
> > been going well so far, so that's been one hangup.
> >
> > There are a few reasons for the department-wide IDE mandate. Our
> > manager has just discovered UML (I don't know anything about it, to be
> > honest), and JDeveloper provides UML functionality out of the box,
> > while any of the free Eclipse UML plugins I could find required a
> > mountain of dependencies and don't appear to work as smoothly as the
> > JDev one. Also, we're trying to replace TOAD as our database tool, and
> > JDev looks like it can do that. The third reason is that most of our
> > applications are Oracle ApEx, and JDev has stuff for that too.
> >
> > I'm trying to port my existing apps to JDeveloper, but without much
> > success. The main problems so far are:
> > - How do I import a Wicket project using the Maven standard directory
> > layout? (I am aware of the Maven JDev plugin for JDev 10, but it has
> > issues with JDev 11)
> > - How do I run a Wicket app in JDeveloper using the internal WebLogic
> server?
> > - Does JDeveloper have some sort of Maven-like functionality for
> > project lifecycle management?
> >
> > I imagine (hope) that most of these questions have easy answers, but
> > I'm just not finding a lot of relevant online
> > documentation/discussion. Most of the JDeveloper web app documentation
> > is focused on EJBs or basic Servlet/JSP-based apps.
> >
> >
> > On Fri, Jun 19, 2009 at 3:53 AM, James
> > Carman<jcar...@carmanconsulting.com> wrote:
> >> +1 on using Maven.  Most folks at our job site use eclipse, but I'm an
> >> IntelliJ junkie (they got me hooked many years ago and I can't break
> >> free).  For the most part, we don't have issues between environments,
> >> provided folks have their plugins set up correctly.
> >>
> >> On Fri, Jun 19, 2009 at 6:39 AM, Martijn Reuvers
> >> <martijn.reuv...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>>
> >>> When you use ADF, then stick to JDeveloper you'll get a lot of
> >>> integration for your application and can really build applications
> >>> fast.
> >>>
> >>> However if you use open-source frameworks like wicket, you're better
> >>> off using one of the other IDE's (Netbeans, Eclipse, IntelliJ). Just
> >>> use maven or so, then your management has nothing to say, as it does
> >>> not really matter what IDE you use. I always say: Use whatever gets
> >>> the job done. =)
> >>>
> >>> On Fri, Jun 19, 2009 at 1:00 AM, Dane Laverty<danelave...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >>> > Our management has chosen to make JDeveloper 11g the required IDE for
> >>> > the department. Searching the Wicket mailing list archives, I find
> >>> > that there is very little discussion about JDev. I'd be interested to
> >>> > know, are any of you currently using JDeveloper as your main Wicket
> >>> > IDE?
> >>> >
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> >>> >
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> >>
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