CodeLite

CodeLite

Screenshot of CodeLite under Linux
Developer(s) Eran Ifrah
Stable release 9.0 / October 12, 2015 (2015-10-12)
Development status Active
Written in C++ (wxWidgets)
Operating system Cross-platform
Type IDE
License GNU GPL
Website www.codelite.org

CodeLite is a free, open-source, cross-platform IDE for the C, C++, PHP, and JavaScript (Node.js) programming languages.[1][2]

History

In August 2006 Eran Ifrah, CodeLite's author, started a project named CodeLite. The idea was to create a code completion library based on ctags, SQLite (hence, CodeLite) and a Yacc based parser that could be used by other IDEs. Later Clang became an optional parser for code completion, greatly improving its functionality.

LiteEditor, a demo application, was developed for demonstrating CodeLite's functionalities. Eventually, LiteEditor evolved into CodeLite.

General

CodeLite is a free, open source, cross platform IDE for the C/C++ programming languages using the wxWidgets toolkit. To comply with CodeLite's open source spirit, the program itself is compiled and debugged using only free tools (MinGW and GDB) for Mac OS X, Windows, Linux and FreeBSD, though CodeLite can execute any third-party compiler or tool that has a command-line interface. CodeLite also supports PHP and JavaScript development (including Node.js support).

CodeLite features project management (workspace / projects), code completion, code refactoring, source browsing, syntax highlight (see CodeLite Features page), Subversion integration, cscope integration, UnitTest++ integration, an interactive debugger built over gdb and a source code editor (based on Scintilla).

CodeLite is distributed under the GNU General Public License v2 or Later. It is being developed and debugged using itself as the development platform with daily updates available through its Git repository. See CodeLite website and the how-to compile "CodeLite from Source" section on the CodeLite source code page.

As of version 7.0 of CodeLite (Released on Feb, 2015) PHP support was added.

See also

References

  1. CodeLite Homepage
  2. CodeLite on SourceForge

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to CodeLite.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, December 25, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.