"Stephen Leake" wrote in message news:u4qx134n6.fsf_-_@nasa.gov... > "Stephane Richard" writes: > > Hmph. Emacs is the best IDE around, as well as being the oldest, and > it supports Ada very well, and has for years. > > I guess you mean "easy to learn" "point and click" IDE, as opposed to > "powerful and productive" IDE. Even there, recent Emacsen (plural of > Emacs :) are pretty good at providing guidance to newbies (not as good > as GPS, I'll grant you). > *** Yeah, again the ever popular VC++'s IDE, VB's IDE, Delphi's IDE and the likes. When I say integrated I don't just mean an editor that can execute a compiler/linker. Bur you are right to say that they do impose a paradigm. And Since Ada is much more than a simple paradigm, beyond it dare I say. I guess wizards and code generators, for Ada, would need a Paradigm Type selection box ;-). > > Only for systems that match what the wizard does. One of the reasons I > like Emacs and Ada is that they do _not_ impose any programming > paradigms; they let you use which ever one is best for the problem at > hand. > > -- > -- Stephe You're getting me convinced Steph :-)...Although I've installed LInux a few times I haven't really had the change to get accustomed to Emacs and any Ada extensions to it. Can I get that for windows and does it/would it work the same and as well under windows? If so, I need a URL to Emacs (for windows) and to any tools that might prove helpful for my Ada coding :-). I'm plannign a dual boot Windows / Linux, but I'm not there yet...so I only have windows for now (I know I'm a sadomajochist ;-). Windows 98 no less :-O. I'd like to see first hand how Emacs and Ada work together. -- St�phane Richard "Ada World" Webmaster http://www.adaworld.com