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Closed 9 years ago.
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What is the up-to-date way to learn about the Eclipse Platform, RCP...? I found these books, but they were last published 3 years ago. Is that considered eons ago in the Eclipse world? What is the canonical Introductory Guide for understanding Eclipse principles nowadays?
There are now two ways to do Eclipse RCP development, the Eclipse 3.x way where the older books are probably still relevant, and the Eclipse 4 'e4' way which features a new application model, direct injection and CSS styling. For an introduction to e4 RCP development see: http://www.vogella.com/articles/EclipseRCP/article.html the author also has an e-book version of the tutorial.
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I am pretty new to Scala and I think that the best way to learn a language is to learn from others. Is there any good scala open source project focusing on machine learning? Thanks a lot.
You should checkout Breeze, it has quite a few built in ML algorithms, though the documentation can be sparse, I would recommend looking at the source:
http://www.scalanlp.org/
That's not an OS project, but i just have to sugest you to watch the talk given by Christopher Severs and Vitaly Gordon on ScalaDays'13 on Machine Learning With Scala
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I setup etherpad and showed my co-worker, and he swears there is an Eclipse plugin that does the same thing but can not remember the name. Neither of us use Eclipse regularly except if we were both interested in making the switch.
Have a look into Saros project: http://www.saros-project.org/
Have a look at http://wiki.eclipse.org/DocShare_Plugin
This is the current "official" solution to collaborative editing in Eclipse.
I think a similar project should exist based on the framework ECF.
(DocShare as mentioned by Tonny Madsen)
There was a SOC project for real-time sharing named Cola, but I don't know its current status.
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I'm looking for a good tool for our product/design team to use when they write up the specifications (app feature requirements) for our projects. Right now we're using Word docs that are continually edited, and it's hard to keep track of what has changed when we're developing.
You may look at CASE Spec. It is an affordable enterprise requirements specification and requirements management software.
The best way to track changes in docs or software is the use of CVS. I used TortoiseCVS for my projects.
In other collaborative projects I used Dropbox that is a share application that also can track changes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concurrent_Versions_System#IDEs_with_support_for_CVS
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Closed 8 years ago.
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Can anyone point me to a decent tutorial for using Maven with Jersey?
I looked at the Oracle tutorial but it is based on NetBeans and Glassfish (which I don't use).
More importantly, it does not seem to provide a web app deployment - where is my WEB-INF directory?
Any guidance would be greatly appreciated
See the below links, whichever one best suits your needs
Jersey samples:
https://github.com/fmucar/framework-samples
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Since this question staled a year and a half ago, has there been some significant development on these projects that would warrant a re-evaluation of the answers? The majority opinion seemed to be that NetBeans was better for JAVA GUI development or JavaScript, otherwise Eclipse was equal or better.
You should check out Aptana Studio. It's Eclipse based and version 3.0 was released in April.