It's great, thx very much, Felix.

It's detail enough, I'm checking them out.

-M.

On Jan 9, 2008 1:59 AM, Felix Cuello <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Hello Michael,
>
> First of all you have to install:
>
> *manpages-dev - Manual pages about using GNU/Linux for development
> manpages-posix-dev - Manual pages about using a POSIX system for
> development
> stl-manual - C++-STL documentation in HTML
> libstdc++6-doc - The GNU Standard C++ Library v3 (documentation files)*
>
> Then you have to find an editor that fits your requirements. There are
> tons of editors... nowadays I'm using an X editor and I prefer multi
> platform editors because I work on Windows and Linux and I want to remember
> just a unique set of shortcuts. My favourite editors are:
>
> These two works on Linux and Windows
> *scite - Lightweight GTK-based Programming Editor
> geany - A fast and lightweight IDE
> *
> Maybe you want to use a bigger editor:
> *eclipse - Extensible Tool Platform and Java IDE
> eclipse-cdt - C/C++ Development Tools for Eclipse*
>
> It is not "straightforward" to configure eclipse to work with C++. however
> the cdt plugin for eclipse is REALLY powerful (I've not used it for 1 or 2
> years), however it has powerful features like "refactoring".
>
> There are many other editors / IDE like:
> *
> kdevelop - An IDE for Unix/X11
> kate - advanced text editor for KDE
> anjuta - A GNOME development IDE for C/C++
> *
> If you do a small research over the internet you will find much more
> editors... that's the list I have in my head right now... but there are many
> other editors.
>
> -Félix
>
>
>
> On Jan 8, 2008 12:30 PM, Michael Yang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hi all:
> >
> > I'm starting the C++ Developer work on linux, no GUI app involved.
> >
> > Could you tell me what the tools you are working with?
> >
> > I'm trying with g++ and vim. Is there a package containing the help doc
> > for the library API, like the MSDN on Windows.
> >
> > Thanks for your helps.
> >
> > -M.
> >
>
>

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