Anjuta

Integrated development environment From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anjuta was an integrated development environment written for the GNOME project.[7] It had support for C, C++, Java, JavaScript, Python and Vala programming language.[8] In May 2022, the project was archived due to a lack of maintainers.[9] Since October 2022 the project's former homepage no longer exists and the domain is owned by an SBOBET, an Indonesian gambling website. It has been superseded by GNOME Builder.

Original authorNaba Kumar
DevelopersJohannes Schmid, Sébastien Granjoux, Massimo Cora, James Liggett and others
Initial releaseDecember 27, 1999; 26 years ago (1999-12-27)[1]
Final release3.34.0 [2] (September 8, 2019; 6 years ago (2019-09-08)) [±]
Quick facts Original author, Developers ...
Anjuta
Original authorNaba Kumar
DevelopersJohannes Schmid, Sébastien Granjoux, Massimo Cora, James Liggett and others
Initial releaseDecember 27, 1999; 26 years ago (1999-12-27)[1]
Final release3.34.0 [2] (September 8, 2019; 6 years ago (2019-09-08)) [±]
Preview release
(none)
Written inC (GTK)
Operating systemUnix-like
PlatformGNOME
SuccessorGNOME Builder
Available in41 languages(with translation ≥ 50%)[3]
TypeIntegrated development environment
LicenseGPL-2.0-or-later[4][5]
Websiteweb.archive.org/web/20221007014133/http://anjuta.org/
Repositorygitlab.gnome.org/Archive/anjuta/
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Final release
3.26.0 / September 10, 2017; 8 years ago (2017-09-10)[6]
Quick facts Final release, Repository ...
Anjuta extras
Final release
3.26.0 / September 10, 2017; 8 years ago (2017-09-10)[6]
Repositorygitlab.gnome.org/Archive/anjuta-extras/
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Anjuta DevStudio

The goal of Anjuta DevStudio was to provide a customizable and extensible IDE framework and at the same time provide implementations of common development tools. Libanjuta was the framework that realizes the Anjuta IDE plugin framework and Anjuta DevStudio realizes many of the common development plugins.

It integrated programming tools such as the Glade Interface Designer and the Devhelp API help browser.

Features

Anjuta features:[10]

Reception

The German magazine LinuxUser recognized Anjuta 1.0.0 (released in 2002) as a good step to increase the number of native GNOME/GTK applications, stating that the application has a very intuitive GUI and new useful features.[12]

In April 2017, Anjuta was removed from the OpenBSD ports tree, with stagnation of development and existence of alternatives cited as reasons.[13]

See also

References

Further reading

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