Even that is not so clear. A full analysis needs to be done of the current
state and what the next steps are.

It is for this reason also that we have C++ Lite support, i.e., there’s a
wizard for importing your C++ environment, which will give you editor,
deployment, and debug support. Right now, that’s all in the standard Apache
NetBeans, I’m preparing some scenarios and YouTube clips to explain how
that works soon.

Gj

On Thu, 11 Mar 2021 at 11:38, Vano Beridze <[email protected]> wrote:

> Is there any document which describes what needs to be done?
>
> On Thu, Mar 11, 2021 at 1:48 PM Geertjan Wielenga
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Yes, we’d love to have full support for C/C++, however the task of
>> integrating and updating it is massive and so far no one has turned up to
>> do it.
>>
>> Gj
>>
>> On Thu, 11 Mar 2021 at 10:35, Alex Orlov <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> I got a message today, saying, that NB 12.3 was released. They say:
>>> «The Apache NetBeans team is pleased to announce that Apache NetBeans
>>> 12.3
>>> was released on March 3rd 2021*. Apache NetBeans is a full IDE for Java
>>> SE, Java EE, PHP, JavaScript, HTML5 and more, including some support for
>>> Groovy and C/C++.»
>>>
>>> Could anyone explain, why NB is a `full IDE for Java, PHP, JS etc` but
>>> only
>>> `some support for C/C++`. I always thought that NB provides a full
>>> support
>>> for C/C++, doesn’t it?
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Best regards, Alex Orlov
>>>
>>

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