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I'm currently in the process of expanding my programming horizons to Linux. In order to do that, it is important to have a good basic toolset on which you can rely on. and what is more basic then the IDE in which you write your code? (honestly, you don't want to code in Notepad; been there done that).

There are two other questions/answers I could find here at Stack Overflow that are somewhat related:

But I'm not really looking for a lightweight IDE and if it is really worth the money I will pay for it, so it doesn't need to be free as well.

So my question is: what is a good IDE available in Linux to use as a programming platform for writing C++ code?

The minimum should be like any other good IDE: syntax highlighting, code completion (like intellisense or its Eclipse counterpart) and integrated debugging (basic breakpoints are good).

I already have searched for it myself, but there is so much to choose from that it is almost impossible to separate the good from the bads by hand, especially for someone like me without any C++ coding experience in Linux. However I do know that Eclipse supports C++, and I really like that IDE for Java, but is it any good for C++ and won't I miss out on something that is even better?

The second post actually has some good suggestions, but what I am missing is what exactly makes the sugested IDE so good for the user, what are its advantages/disadvantages?

Maybe my question should therefore be: what IDE do you propose given your own experience with it?, and why that one?. Convince me.

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This is, I think, the 4th "What IDE should I use on Linux" question in a day or two. – Ben Collins Sep 17 '08 at 19:57
Maybe you should look at the date this question was asked... or point the newer questions to here – Sven Sep 19 '08 at 7:38

30 Answers

vote up 68 vote down check

Actually, I recently made the switch from Visual Studio (years of experience there) to Linux and the first thing I did was try to find a reasonable IDE.

And then I noticed that this simply isn't how you work there*, and I threw everything out, spent a few days reading manuals, set up my shell (bash), set up a GVIM environment, learned the GCC/binutils toolchain, make and gdb and lived happily ever after.

There are certainly disadvantages but I am sure that I work much more productive since making the switch.

*) It really isn't! And that's not an anachronism either because the toolchain described above is incredibly mature and powerful. Any IDE has to replicate hundreds of unique features to get anywhere near the power of these tools that have been honed to the point of perfection for decades. The learning curve might be quite steep, but much less so than I expected.

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i strongly disagree. a decent ide is important no matter what u'r working on. it drastically increases productivity. i use codeblocks and find that going back to VI is almost impossible. i have coded on Mac, Win and Linux, and although i find visual studio to be the best IDE, codeblocks comes close. – DavidG Oct 21 '08 at 17:40
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David, perhaps you could detail (own answer …) what exactly you're missing from the toolchain I described that an IDE delivers. As I've said, I've come from a strong IDE background and my productivity increase was the exact inverse of yours. – Konrad Rudolph Oct 22 '08 at 9:31
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UNIX is an IDE. All of it. – dsm May 8 at 9:48
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What refactoring support does Vim offer? In Eclipse (which runs under Linux), I can change the name of any Java method I wish, even if it is called in 300 places. Can you do it easily in Vim? – quant_dev Jun 10 at 9:13
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quant_dev: refactoring requires parsing the source code in some way. As far as I know, no VIM modules do that so the answer to your question is “none.” That's one of the reasons to prefer an IDE for IDE-centered languages such as Java. Since refactoring support (etc) for C++ is so minimal anyway (even in IDEs), this doesn't apply to C++. – Konrad Rudolph Jun 10 at 13:56
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  1. Code::Blocks
  2. Eclipse CDT

Soon you'll find that IDEs are not enough, and you'll have to learn the GCC toolchain anyway (which isn't hard, at least learning the basic functionality). But no harm in reducing the transitional pain with the IDEs, IMO.

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vote up 14 vote down

KDevelop is pretty nice.

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KDevelop4 is a really, really great C++ IDE. Unfortunately it hasn't yet been released, so I'm hesitant to recommend it, especially to someone new to Linux. I build it from SVN weekly and am nothing but impressed with the direction it's taking. – Parker May 8 at 18:56
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Could you clarify a little bit more how it was for you, what you had to change. Maybe you could point me in the right direction by providing some links to the information you used.

My first source were actually the tools' man pages. Just type

$ man toolname

on the command line ($ here is part of the prompt, not the input).

Depending on the platform, they're quite well-written and can also be found on the Internet. In the case of make, I actually read the complete documentation which took a few hours. Actually, I don't think this is necessary or helpful in most cases but I had a few special requirements in my first assignments under Linux that required a sophisticated makefile. After writing the makefile I gave it to an experienced colleague who did some minor tweaks and corrections. After that, I pretty much knew make.

I used gVim because I had some (but not much) prior experience there, I can't say anything at all about Emacs or alternatives. I find it really helps to read other peoples' .gvimrc config file. Many people put it on the web. Here's mine.

Don't try to master all binutils at once, there are too many functions. But get a general overview so you'll know where to search when needing something in the future. You should, however, know all the important parameters for g++ and ld (the GCC linker tool that's invoked automatically except when explicitly prevented).

Also I'm curious, do you have code completion and syntax highlighting when you code?

Syntax highlighting: yes, and a much better one than Visual Studio. Code completion: yes-ish. First, I have to admit that I didn't use C++ code completion even in Visual Studio because (compared to VB.NET and C#) it wasn't good enough. I don't use it often now but nevertheless, gVim has native code completion support for C++. Combined with the ctags library and a plug-in like taglist this is almost an IDE.

Actually, what got me started was an article by Armin Ronacher. Before reading the text, look at the screenshots at the end of it!

Do you have to compile first before getting (syntax) errors?

Yes. But this is the same for Visual Studio, isn't it (I've never used Whole Tomato)? Of course, the syntax highlighting will show you non-matching brackets but that's about all.

and how do you debug (again think breakpoints etc)?

I use gdb which is a command-line tool. There's also a graphical frontend called DDD. gdb is a modern debugging tool and can do everything you can do in an IDE. The only thing that really annoys me is reading a stack trace because lines aren't indented or formatted so it's really hard to scan the information when you're using a lot of templates (which I do). But those also clutter the stack trace in IDEs.

Like I said, I had the 'pleasure' to set my first steps in the Java programming language using Windows Notepad and the command line Java compiler in high school, and it was, .. well a nightmare! certainly when I could compare it with other programming courses I had back then where we had decent IDE's

You shouldn't even try to compare a modern, full-feature editor like Emacs or gVim to Notepad. Notepad is an embellished TextBox control, and this really makes all the difference. Additionally, working on the command line is a very different experience in Linux and Windows. The Windows cmd.exe is severely crippled. PowerShell is much better.

/EDIT: I should mention explicitly that gVim has tabbed editing (as in tabbed browsing, not tabs-vs-spaces)! It took me ages to find them although they're not hidden at all. Just type :tabe instead of plain :e when opening a file or creating a new one, and gVim will create a new tab. Switching between tabs can be done using the cursor or several different shortcuts (depending on the platform). The key gt (type g, then t in command mode) should work everywhere, and jumps to the next tab, or tab no. n if a number was given. Type :help gt to get more help.

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Hi Konrad. Do you use DDD? – mackenir Nov 5 '08 at 10:51
@confuzatron: No, I use gdb for several reasons. Most importantly, I usually work without any X server running. Also, I'm a bit uncomfortable about the fact that DDD hasn't seen any update in quite a long time. On the other hand, project ownership has just changed and there seem to be changes afoot. – Konrad Rudolph Nov 5 '08 at 20:15
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As an old-time UNIX guy, I always use Emacs. But that has a pretty steep and long learning curve, so I'm not sure I can recommend it to newcomers.

There really isn't a "good" IDE for Linux. Eclipse is not very good for C/C++ (CDT is improving, but is not very useful yet). The others are missing all the features you are going to be looking for.

It really is important to learn how all the individual tools (gcc, make, gdb, etc.) work. After you do so, you may find the Visual Studio way of doing things to be very limiting.

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vote up 8 vote down

A quick answer, just to add a little more knowledge to this topic:
You must definitely check out NetBeans. Netbeans 6.7 has the following features:

  • C/C++ Projects and Templates: Supports syntax highlighting, automatic code completion, automatic indentation.
  • It has a C/C++ Debugger
  • Supports Compiler Configurations, Configuration Manager and Makefile Support (with a Wizard).
  • It has a Classes Window, a Usages Window and a File Navigation Window (or panel).
  • A Macro expansion view, and also tooltips.
  • Support for QT development.

I think it's a perfect (and far better) Visual Studio substitution, and a very good tool to learn C/C++.

Good Luck!

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vote up 7 vote down

Just a quick follow up for this question...

It's been a month since I started using Vim as my main 'GUI' tool for programming C++ in Linux. At first the learning curve was indeed a bit steep but after a while and with the right options turned on and scripts running I really got the hang of it!

I love the way how you can shape Vim to suite your needs; just add/change key mappings and Vim is turned into a highly productive 'IDE'.

The toolchain to build and compile a C++ program on Linux is also really intuitive. make and g++ are the tools you'll use.

The debugger ddd is however not really that good, but maybe that's because I haven't had the time to master it properly.

So to anyone who is, or was looking for a good C++ IDE in Linux, just like I was, your best bet lays with the standard available tools in Linux itself (Vim, g++, ddd) and you should really at least try to use them, before looking for sonething else...

Last but not least, I really want to thank konrad for his answer here, It really helped me find my way in the Linux development environment, thank you!

I'm also not closing this question, so people can still react or maybe even add new suggestions or additions to the already really nice answers...

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If you like Eclipse for Java, I suggest Eclipse CDT. Despite C/C++ support isn't so powerful as is for Java, it still offers most of the features. It has a nice feature named Managed Project that makes working with C/C++ projects easier if you don't have experience with Makefiles. But you can still use Makefiles. I do C and Java coding and I'm really happy with CDT. I'm developing the firmware for a embedded device in C and a application in Java that talks to this device, and is really nice to use the same environment for both. I guess it probably makes me more productive.

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vote up 6 vote down

Not to repeat an answer, but I think I can add a bit more.

Slickedit is an excellent IDE.

It supports large code-bases well without slowing down or spending all its time indexing. (This is a problem I had with eclipse's cdt). Slickedit's speed is probably the nicest thing about it, actually.
The code completion works well and there are a large amount of options for things like automatic formatting, beautification and refactoring.
It does have integrated debugging.
It has plug-in support and fairly active community creating them.
In theory, you should be able to integrate well with people doing the traditional makefile stuff, as it allows you to create a project directly from one, but that didn't work as smoothly as I would have liked when I tried it.
In addition to Linux, there are Mac and Windows versions of it, should you need them.

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At least for Qt specific projects, the Qt Creator Beta (from Qt Software) shows great promise.

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Netbeans is in my experience the most heavyweight IDE there is. I'm using Eclipse with the CDT plugin, its fast and it works pretty well.

http://www.eclipse.org/cdt/

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I just can add my +1 to this. netbeans is really a remarkable piece of software. Java, Ruby, C/C++ all is supported and suprise it works ;-) – Friedrich Mar 15 at 6:43
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I hear Anjuta is pretty slick for Gnome users. I played a bit with KDevelop and it's nice, but sort of lacking featurewise. Code::Blocks is also very promising, and I like that one best.

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I program fairly heavily on C++ in Linux and I've found no decent IDE on Linux.

On Linux you need two tools. An editor and a build tool. This has some disadvantages in that there is more learning curve learning how to use a build tool than an IDE, and some advantages in that it doesn't force everyone to use the same IDE with the same project model.

As others have mentioned, Slickedit is the closest thing to visual studios in the editor department.

Some people like emacs and vim and will tell you that ancient teletype editors are just "the way it is done" on Linux. Generally, you can ignore these people, as they haven't changed how they've written software in 30 years, and are hostile to any new ideas. Most of them write in C and not C++ anyway, so really they are playing armchair quaterback when giving advice on tools for writing C++.

Actually, it's surprising how few people on Linux use C++ given how prevalent it is elsewhere. Even the C++ compiler G++ is written in C as it is FSF policy to only use C and Lisp.

For a build tool, you should check out either scons or CMake. Scons is a python based build tool that can parse C++ #include statements and automatically detect dependencies between .cpp and .h files. It also does a much more accurate build than other tools, and you will probably never have to do a "make clean" equivalent. It supports parallel builds as well.

Scons also has a lot of the functionality of autotools integrated into it, which is nice because autotools is awful software that almost no one actually knows how to use properly.

Make and autotools are often recommended, and should be ignored because again people only like it because it is old and familiar, not because it is actually up to par with modern competitors.

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Thing about the old tools is that they are extensively battle-tested and have been refined for quite a few years. The learning curve is steep, but the results are excellent. It sounds to me that you haven't extensively tried them, and are going on prejudice. – David Thornley Jan 16 at 22:04
I have used the "old tools". I still use emacs and make occasionally. Have you used scons or slickedit? – catphive Feb 3 at 21:48
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Although I use Vim, some of my co-workers use SlickEdit which looks pretty good. I'm not certain about integrated debugging because we wouldn't be able to do that on our particular project anyway.

SlickEdit does have good support for navigating large code bases, with cross referencing and tag jumping. Of course it has the basic stuff like syntax highlighting and code completion too.

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vote up 3 vote down

My personal favorite is the CodeLite 2.x IDE.

see: http://www.codelite.org

The decision to use CodeLite was based on my own research regarding the following C++ IDE for Linux:

  • Eclipse Galileo with CDT Plugin
  • NetBeans 6.7 (which is also the base for the SunStudio IDE)
  • KDevelop4
  • CodeBlocks 8.02
  • CodeLite 2.x

After all I have decided to use CodeLite 2.x.

Below I have listed some Pros and Cons regarding the mentioned C++ IDEs. Please note, that this reflects my personal opinion only!

Eclipse Galileo with CDT Plugin

Pros:

  • reasonable fast
  • also supports Java, Perl(with E.P.I.C plugin)
  • commonly used and well maintained
  • also available for other OS flavours (Windows, MacOS, Solaris, AIX(?))

Cons:

  • GUI is not very intuitive
  • heavy weight
  • Only supports CVS (AFAIK)

NetBeans 6.7 (note this is also the base for the SunStudio IDE)

Pros:

  • one of the most intuitive GUI I have ever seen
  • also supports Java, Python, Ruby
  • integrates CVS, SVN, Mercurial
  • commonly used and well maintained
  • also available for other OS flavours (Windows, MacOS, Solaris)

Cons:

  • extremly slow
  • heavy weight
  • uses Spaces for indentation, which is not the policy at my work. I'm sure this is configurable, but I couldn't find out how to to that

KDevelop4 (note: I did not much testing on it)

Pros:

  • commonly used on Linux
  • integrates CVS, SVN, Mercurial

Cons:

  • the GUI looks somewhat old fashioned
  • heavy weight
  • very specific to the KDE environment

CodeBlocks 8.02 (note: I did not much testing on it)

Pros:

  • reasonable fast

Cons:

  • the GUI looks somewhat old fashioned (although it has a nice startup screen)
  • the fonts in the editor are very small
  • some icons (e.g. the debugger related icons starting/stepping) are very small
  • no versioncontrol integration

CodeLite 2.x (note: this is my personal favorite)

Pros:

  • the best, modern looking and intuitive GUI I have seen on Linux
  • lightweight
  • reasonable fast
  • integrates SVN
  • also available on other OS flavours(Windows, MacOS, Solaris(?))

Cons:

  • no CVS integration (that's important for me because I have to use it at work)
  • no support for Java, Perl, Python (would be nice to have)
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vote up 2 vote down

Checkout Netbeans, it's written in Java so you'll have the same environment regardless of your OS, and it supports a lot more than just C++.

I'm not going to try to convince you, because I think IDEs can be a very personal choice. For me it improves my productivity by being fast, supporting the languages I code in and has the standard features you'd expect from an IDE.

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I like SciTE as a basic editor for C++/Python on Linux. It has keyboard bindings similar to VC so you do not have to reprogram your cut-and-paste fingers.

I use it together with Git for source code control and the very useful 'git grep' command for searching in your code base.

I played with Eclipse CDT but my source codebase was to big for it and I spend too much time waiting on the IDE. If your project is smaller it may be good for you though.

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hi there,

Sun Studio version 12 is a free download(FREE and paid support available) -- http://developers.sun.com/sunstudio/downloads/thankyou.jsp?submit=%A0FREE+Download%A0%BB%A0.

I'm sure you have code completion and debugging support including plugin support in this IDE.

Sun Studio is available for Linux as well as Solaris. forums : http://developers.sun.com/sunstudio/community/forums/index.jsp. Sun Studio Linux forums : http://forum.sun.com/forum.jspa?forumID=855

I'll be eager to hear your feedback on this tool.

BR,
~A

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I quite like Ultimate++'s IDE. It has some features that were designed to use with their own library (which, BTW, is quite a nice toolkit if you don't want to buy on either GTK+ or QT) but it works perfectly well with general C++ projects. It provides decent code completion, good syntax colouring, integrated debugging, and all other features most modern IDEs support.

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vote up 2 vote down

I've previously used Ultimate++ IDE and it's rather good.

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And then I noticed that this simply isn't how you work there*, and I threw everything out, spent a few days reading manuals, set up my shell (bash), set up a GVIM environment, learned the GCC/binutils toolchain, make and gdb and lived happily ever after.

I'd mostly agree, but the problem is also one of perception: we forget how difficult it was to become productive in any chose IDE (or other environment). I find IDE's (Visual Studio, NetBeans, Eclipse) amazingly cumbersome in so many ways.

As an old-time UNIX guy, I always use Emacs. But that has a pretty steep and long learning curve, so I'm not sure I can recommend it to newcomers.

I'd second that; use Emacs as my primary editor on both Linux and on MSW (XP2,W2K). I would disagree that it has a steep learning curve, but would say that because of the huge number of features it has a long learning curve. You can be productive within a short time, but if you want you can learn new features of it for years to come.

However -- don't expect all the features of Emacs to be available on drop-down menus, there is just too much functionality to find it there.

As I metioned, I've used GNU Emacs on MSW for years. And it's always worked well with Visual Studio until I "upgraded" to 2008; now it sometimes delays many seconds before refreshing files from disk. The main reason for editing in the VS window is the "Intellisense" code completion feature.

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vote up 2 vote down

geany I recommend

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I recommend you read The Art Of UNIX Progranmming. It will frame your mind into using the environment as your IDE.

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I really suggest codeblocks. It's not as heavy as Eclipse and it's got Visual Studio project support.

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Konrad's advice is excellent, and you should become happily productive in a classic vi/cc/ld/db/make environment without too much trouble. Many, many university students have learned this toolchain over the course of a 10-15 week class.

That said, the other classic environment is to go the Emacs route. I wouldn't call it an IDE, but it does integrate two important development tools into the editor: the compiler's output, and the debugger. You can have it zip you to the line in the file corresponding to a compiler error, and you can set breakpoints and use the stepper from the editor.

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I'm glad you seem to be working it out with vim. But I have to say, I'm a bit mystified about how you already "really like Eclipse for Java", implying that you're already familiar with how it works. In that case, why wouldn't you also use it for C++? CDT meets every requirement you've mentioned.

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The Eclipse C++ IDE is crippled beyond usefulness when compared to the Java equivalent. Seriously, it is hopeless. All the memory muscle tricks learned in the Java version inexplicably fail in the C++ one, making you much less productive. Like Superman with kryptonite in his undies. – rq Feb 20 at 21:34
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Having been raised on Visual Studio, I've found the relatively young Code::Blocks to be very familiar.

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Use Mono-Develop. It is very similar to Visual Studio. It works cross-platform and is Awesome!!

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SlickEdit. I have used and loved SlickEdit since 2005, both on Windows and on Linux. I also have experience working in Visual Studio (5, 6, 2003, 2005) and just with Emacs and command line. I use SlickEdit with external makefiles, some of my teammates use SlickEdit, others use Emacs/vi. I do not use the integrated debugger, integrated version control, integrated build system: I generally find too much integration to be real pain. SlickEdit is robust (very few bugs), fast and intuitive. It is like a German car, a driver's car.

The newest versions of SlickEdit seem to offer many features that do not interest me, I am a little worried that the product will become bloated and diluted in the future. For now (I use V13.0) it is great.

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why wouldn't you also use it for C++? CDT meets every requirement you've mentioned.

I didn't use eclipse at first because I wasn't sure that it was equally good at giving me the means of developing in C++ (efficiently). Besides that, I was also convinced that there had to be better, more specialized tools available for c++ development in Linux:

and I really like that [eclipse] IDE for java, but is it any good for c++ and won't I miss out on something that is even better?

I honestly believe that, although some tools (like eclipse) are great at many things, it is best to look for other options as well (and I don't mean that for IDE's only, but in general and even in real life)...
Like in this case, vim is really great, and I would have missed out on it if I sticked to something I already knew.

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