I think there are some IDE's for Linux, but none seem to be as popular as Emacs/Xemacs. Emacs is not an integrated development environment per se, but it has many of the capabilities of one plus other things.
Emacs has modes for C, C++, LaTeX, shell scripts, Matlab, and yes, even Pascal. font-lock-mode will give you syntax highlighting. C-h m will show key bindings for the mode that you are in. So that the vi lovers dont flame me too badly, I have to point out that vim has "modes" too, but I dont know if it has one for Pascal. Mike On Mon, Jul 13, 1998 at 04:46:37PM -0400, Alexander Gutfraind wrote: > Hello fellow users! > It's a weird newbie question I'm about to ask. but what > about Pascal? > you all seem to write in C or PERL, but I like pascal. > when I checked the pascal compiler I found it required all > types > of libraries, libc5. but shouldn't it cause some problems to > libc6? > I am not an experienced programmer, but would like to > improve that in Debian linux environment. > Is there (rather what are) C and Pascal complete > developments environments > like TurboPascal and TurboC from borland I'm using? > > TIA. -- Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null