CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2011/ch1 1a ms
CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2010/ch1 1a ms
Introduction
This article is trying to analyze and compare different Integrated Development Environments(IDE) that are in use for software development in Ruby. We will be comparing Aptana RadRails, Ruby Mine, Eclipse and NetBeans.
What is an IDE?
An IDE is a software application which provides comprehensive facilities to maximize computer programmers' productivity. An IDE consists of:
- A source code editor.
- A compiler and/or an interpreter.
- Build automation tools.
- A debugger.
The aim is to abstract the configuration necessary to piece together command line utilities in a cohesive unit. Most IDE's are graphical to improve interaction.
What is RUBY and its features?
RUBY is a dynamic, reflective, general-purpose object-oriented programming language.
Ruby supports multiple programming paradigms, including:
- Functional: Computation is evaluation of a mathematical function.
- Object oriented: Data structures consisting of data fields and methods are used.
- Imperative: Computation in terms of statements that change the program stare.
- Reflective: Computer program can evaluate and modify its structure.
Additionally, it has a dynamic type system and automatic memory management.
Comparison
= System requirements =
General
Eclipse | NetBeans | Aptana RadRails | RubyMine | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Version | Eclipse | NetBeans 7.0.1 | Aptana 2.0.5 | RubyMine 3.2.3 |
Windows XP/Vista/7 | Windows XP/Vista/7 | Windows XP/ more | Windows 2003/XP/Vista/7 | |
Windows Processor | 500 MHZ Intel Pentium 3 | Pentium Level 4 | Intel Pentium 3 or higher. | |
RAM | 1 GB* | 2GB | 512 MB | 2GB RAM recommended. |
Disk Space | 150 MB free disk space. | 1GB free disk space. | 71.9MB for an Eclipse Plugin | 91.5MB or more. |
Mac OS X | Mac OS 10.5 Intel | Mac OS 10.4 + | Mac OS 10.5 or higher | |
Processor | Dual Core Intel(32 or 64 bit) | Power PC G4/G5 | 1.42GHz Intel based Mac recommended. | |
RAM | 512 MB RAM | 512 MB RAM | 2GB RAM recommended | |
Disk Space | 650MB of free disk space. | 71.9MB for an Eclipse Plugin | 84.7MB or more. | |
Linux | Ubuntu 9.10 | No preferences mentioned | GNOME or KDE Desktop | |
Processor | 800MHz Intel Pentium III or equivalent | Pentium 4-level processor | Intel Pentium III 800 MHz or higher | |
RAM | 512 MB RAM | 512 MB RAM | 2GB RAM recommended | |
Disk Space | 650 MB of free disk space | 71.9 MB for an Eclipse Plugin | 82.1MB or more |
General
Netbeans | RadRails | Rubymine | IDEA IntelliJ | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Statements and keyword completion | YES | NO | YES | YES |
Generate Type Constructor | NO | YES | YES | NO |
Override Method | NO | YES | YES | NO |
Code Formatting | Yes | YES | YES | YES |
Brace Matching | YES | YES | YES | YES |
Go to symbol | NO | NO | YES | YES |
General comparison
NetBeans
NetBeans provides effective and clear sytnax highlighting. The autocompletion provided is more advanced than Idea and Eclipse. However NetBeans misses a finalized installation configuration and live coding templates. NetBeans makes it easy to add plugins. It includes a complete editing assistance.
Eclipse
Eclipse provides advance refactoring tools developed by students and also comes with a well done documentation and explanations. The biggest advantage of Eclipse is its Debugging ability.
Idea
Idea has a nice syntax highlighting and interactivity with the coder. Autocompletion in Idea is limited to keywords and statements only.
RadRails
It supports syntax highlighting, auto completion, code assist and error reporting. It also supports refactoring but it is limited to instance variables, inlining and renaming. It also supports fast and integrated debugger.
Rubymine
Rubymine is an intelligent full featured code editor. It also performs automatic Ruby code styling with brace matching.It also provides code completion and navigation. RubyMine allows quick rake tasks execution.
Refactoring
Netbeans | RadRails | Rubymine | IDEA IntelliJ | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rename | YES | YES | YES | YES |
Convert Local variable to field | NO | YES | NO | NO |
Encapsulate field | NO | YES | YES | NO |
Extract Method | NO | YES | NO | NO |
Inline Class | NO | YES | NO | NO |
Inline Local Variable | NO | YES | NO | NO |
Inline Method | NO | YES | NO | NO |
Merge Class Parts in file | NO | YES | NO | NO |
Merge with external Class Parts | NO | YES | NO | NO |
Move Field | NO | YES | NO | NO |
Move Method | NO | YES | NO | NO |
Push Down | NO | YES | NO | NO |
Split Local Variable | NO | YES | NO | NO |
Version Control Integration
All the IDE support SVN, Git, CVS control version systems.
Debugging
Netbeans 7.0
Netbeans supports a configurable debugger which can be used to set breakpoints, look at the local variables, navigate the call stack and switch threads. The Netbeans debugger also supports expression evaluation, expression steping, multi-session debugging, multi- threaded Debugging etc. It also allows us to attach the debugger to any remote process started from the command line.
RadRails
Aptana RadRails has an integrated Debugger which allows us to set breakpoitns, inspect variables and control execution.
RubyMine
RubyMine supports an advanced graphical debugger. It provides a convenient user interface with a fully customizable UI. It also allows us to define hit conditions for breakpoints and determine whether to stop or continue the execution.
IntelliJ
It supports a highly fast and powerful debugger which is capable of executing multiple profiles. It also displays custom objects in debugger. Remote debugging, variable modifications and expression evaluations are other important debugging options supported.
Eclipse
The Ruby interpreter for Eclipse broadcasts debugging information over a specific (configurable) port, and tools like the RDT can listen over that port and supply the types of debugging support developers expect.