Java Magazine: JUnit 5 Arrives by Andrew Benstock
English | December 5, 2018 | ASIN: B07L5N88V1 | AZW3 | 2.13 MB
English | December 5, 2018 | ASIN: B07L5N88V1 | AZW3 | 2.13 MB
At JavaOne this year, the NetBeans community
announced that the project was moving
from its longtime home at Oracle to the Apache
Software Foundation (ASF). In a history that
dates back some 20 years, this will be NetBeans’
ifth new home, showing the product’s remarkable
power of endurance. An important question
is whether working under the aegis of the ASF
will bring NetBeans new life and new aicionados,
or whether it signals the inal chapter of a
storied lifeline.
As many readers know, NetBeans is one of
the four principal Java IDEs. The others are the
open source Eclipse from the Eclipse Foundation,
IntelliJ IDEA from JetBrains (consisting of an open
source version and a higher-end closed source
version), and JDeveloper (a free, closed source IDE
from Oracle). What few readers might know is
that NetBeans was the irst of these products—
beating Borland’s JBuilder by a year. (JDeveloper,
which was based on JBuilder, was next, followed
years later by Eclipse and IntelliJ.)
announced that the project was moving
from its longtime home at Oracle to the Apache
Software Foundation (ASF). In a history that
dates back some 20 years, this will be NetBeans’
ifth new home, showing the product’s remarkable
power of endurance. An important question
is whether working under the aegis of the ASF
will bring NetBeans new life and new aicionados,
or whether it signals the inal chapter of a
storied lifeline.
As many readers know, NetBeans is one of
the four principal Java IDEs. The others are the
open source Eclipse from the Eclipse Foundation,
IntelliJ IDEA from JetBrains (consisting of an open
source version and a higher-end closed source
version), and JDeveloper (a free, closed source IDE
from Oracle). What few readers might know is
that NetBeans was the irst of these products—
beating Borland’s JBuilder by a year. (JDeveloper,
which was based on JBuilder, was next, followed
years later by Eclipse and IntelliJ.)