InfoQ

News

IntelliJ IDEA 7.0 Adds Spring/Hibernate Support, Eclipse Interoperability, and Maven Integration

Posted by Scott Delap on Oct 15, 2007 03:29 PM

Community
Java
Topics
Artifacts & Tools
Tags
IntelliJ IDEA
Jetbrains has released IntelliJ IDEA 7.0. This version rounds out support for many popular Java technologies while adding support for additional languages such as Groovy and Ruby. Among its highlights:
Spring and Hibernate Support Improved Performance on Multi-Core CPU's Eclipse and Maven Integration Improved Version Control Support Including ClearCase Ruby/Rails Support Groovy/Grails Support Debugger Enhancements Dependency Structure Matrix

InfoQ talked with Ann Oreshnikova of Jetbrains about the release. Oreshnikova was first asked about how Jetbrains views the Java IDE market and the competition of the products in it:

 

Java IDE market keeps evolving, and this is the most pleasant thing about it. We all know that evolution is a natural result of competition. With regard to it, the Java market today is indeed very special. Competition here is not even because of slightly different audience segments targeted by different vendors. To tell the truth, we believe that competition between the 2 free tools is much tougher that between any one of them and IntelliJ IDEA. As for the segments where we might compete, our main weapons are: innovation, highest quality, productivity that we ensure and pleasant development on top of that. These are actually the main reasons why the number of our customers is not just enviably stable, but keeps growing.

The topic then shifted language support including Groovy, Ruby, and Flex:

 

Ruby and Groovy are gaining more and more popularity in the development world. Among IntelliJ IDEA users there are many followers of these new technologies, and their requests for support have played a decisive role in adding Ruby and Groovy to this new version. Getting back to your question about the trend, I would say that yes, IntelliJ IDEA is already a cross-language IDE, and is going to continue being such.

InfoQ then asked Oreshnikova about the fact that IntelliJ IDEA 7 includes a number of "why now" features in 7 such as Hibernate, Spring, and Maven support. All of these projects have been around for several versions of IntelliJ:

 

At first glance, this is a reasonable question, but on the other hand we have to admit that even being around for several years Spring and Hibernate have become the de facto standard not longer than a year/year-and-a-half ago. So, when it happened, it was a sign for us to include them into our roadmap. One can say that they appeared too late in IntelliJ IDEA, but it’s better to be a bit late and bring the best in the market support.

The conversation then shifted to the most difficult feature to develop:

 

Hmmm. This is a tough question. Many of them were rather difficult and challenging, just from different aspects. If I had to pick one that was technically especially hard to solve, it would be multi-core/CPU support. We had to really fight with it, but the performance leap that we achieved in the IDE editor is definitely worth all those efforts.

Finally, Oreshnikova was asked about the next evolutionary change coming for IDE's:

 

It’s true. Development tools not only reflect the existing development trends but also form them. As for the next evolutionary change, we believe that it’s going to be the so-called polyglot programming (I have borrowed this term from Neal Ford as it nicely applies to the modern trends). When widely adopted, the polyglot approach may even affect architectural decisions, not only everyday programming techniques. Thus an IDE capable of supporting productive multi-language development, through seamless language and framework integration, should become the best developers’ friend.

1 comment

Reply

Perfromance and libraries dependencies. by Zmicer Harachka Posted Oct 16, 2007 3:59 PM

Back to top

Perfromance and libraries dependencies.

Oct 16, 2007 3:59 PM by Zmicer Harachka

Hi, Scott! Thank you for sharing this interview with us! Do you know if some issues with the performace were fixed in general? I have used IDEA and noticed it could hang on time to time. I believe it could be adjusted, and I feel the progress of the IDEA team form the 3rd version till the 6th. It is great progress, but the computers also becomes faster... Still seeing at the release notes on perfomance I believe they did it better: IDE startup speed greatly improved JSP editing speed accelerated More operations performed in background (Find Usages, VCS update etc.) Improved performance on multi-core CPUs Faster XML reformatting Faster project loading Improved files synchronization speed Revamped Local History engine Thanks.

Exclusive Content

Operational Scalability in the Next Generation Web World

Wayne Fenton, Director of Architecture at eBay Inc., talks about the ways in which software architects can design systems for much-improved efficiency and reliability from an operational perspective.

An Overview of the eXo Platform

Mestrallet and Grall cover the eXo platform, the Portlet 1.0 (JSR 168) and 2.0 (JSR 286) specs, eXo Web 2.0 Portal, JSR 286 Inter-portlet communication, eXo JCR and eXo Enterprise Content Management.

The Top 10 Ways to Botch Enterprise Java Application Scalability and Reliability

Purdy discusses Java scaling, performance vs scaling, rewriting frameworks, databases, bottlenecks, abstractions, disaster recovery, one-size-fits-all architecture, big JVM heaps and network failures.

Building Scalability and Achieving Performance: A Virtual Panel

Our panel of leading experts explores some of the challenges and thought processes that go into making their apps as scalable and performant as possible.

Domain-Driven Design in an Evolving Architecture

Mat Wall and Nik Silver explain how their has been using Domain-Driven Design in an evolving and Agile environment, at high traffic news site guardian.co.uk.

Avi Bryant on DabbleDB, Smalltalk and Persistence

In this interview, Avi Bryant talks about the Smalltalk web framework Seaside, DabbleDB, using Smalltalk images for persistence instead of an RDBMs, GemStone and more.

Book Review: Agile Adoption Patterns, A Roadmap to Organizational Success

With Agile adoption, context is everything: this book offers patterns and tools to help determine which practices most contribute to meeting your organization's goals.

Rob Windsor on WCF with REST, JSON and RSS

WCF is not just for SOAP based services and can be used with popular protocols like RSS, REST and JSON. Join Rob Windsor as he introduces WCF 3.5 and its new native support for non-SOAP services.


You are viewing a mobilized version of this site...
View original page here

Mobilized by Mowser Mowser