I teach a C++ course using Visual Studio. One of my students has a Mac, and was looking for an IDE to use on his machine. What would be good to recommend?
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Xcode which is part of the MacOS Developer Tools is a great IDE. There's also NetBeans and Eclipse that can be configured to build and compile C++ projects. | |||||||||||||
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If you are looking for a full-fledged IDE like Visual Studio, I think Eclipse might be your best bet. Eclipse is also highly extensible and configurable. See here: http://www.eclipse.org/downloads/ | |||
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XCode is free and good, which is lucky because it's pretty much the only option on the Mac. | |||
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Code::Blocks is cross-platform, using the wxWidgets library. It's the one I use. | |||
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It's not really an IDE per se, but I really like TextMate, and with the C++ bundle that ships with it, it can do a lot of the things you'd find in an IDE (without all the bloat!). | |||
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I'm going to agree with the crowd and suggest XCode. Take note that if he's still running MacOS 10.4, he won't be able to get the newest version of XCode. | |||
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Another (albeit non-free) option is to install VMware Fusion or Parallels Desktop on the Mac and run Windows with Visual Studio in a VM. This works really pretty well. The downsides are:
The upside is that you and the student don't need to hassle with differences in the IDE that may not be accounted for in your instruction materials. | |||||||
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Avoid Eclipse for C/C++ development for now on Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard). There are serious problems which make debugging problematic or nearly impossible on it currently due to GDB incompatibility problems and the like. See: Trouble debugging C++ using Eclipse Galileo on Mac. | |||
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Off course there is Mono... | |||
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You'll find a good list of IDEs here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Macintosh_software#Developer_tools_and_IDEs | |||
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