This article was published in the Borland
Community web site on November 15, 1999 |
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![]() These articles about open-source software appeared every Thursday in Borland Developer News between September 1999 and June 2000. |
Java bikingLaunching a full-blown IDE for a brief Java programming excursion can be like driving the car to a nearby shopping mall. If you have ever imagined the equivalent of a Java bicycle, your fantasy may have come true with BeanShell v. 1.0. I'd just moved to Davis, California, and it was the first time I'd gone shopping. I parked my bicycle in an empty rack, dashed in, grabbed the few things I needed, and found a checkout register. "Pehperohplahstig." "Sorry?" The salute was unexpected, and the tinny accent of the northern-California girl didn't help. "Paper-or-plastic?" she repeated, more slowly this time. But it wasn't until the third time that I understood. "Oh! Paper bags will be OK. Thanks." The reply "You bet!" was another surprise, but I didn't ask for translation. I paid, gathered my stuff, and hurried out, glad I could cycle home quickly with my groceries. As a young programmer, I was always in a hurry, and if there's a heaven for bikers, it is the little town of Davis. My apartment was well within walking distance of the shopping mall, but I preferred to ride. It took only a few minutes to reach the mall by bike, most of them spent waiting at the Russell Avenue crossing. Driving would have been overkill for such a short trip -- especially considering the effects on the ozone layer -- and probably the most time-consuming of the options. I've often felt that launching a full-blown development environment for a brief Java programming excursion is like taking the car out to go to the nearby mall. Yet going about with just a text editor and the command line compiler seems too cumbersome, too much like going on foot -- especially if the task at hand is not trivial, or if it's one of those days when one out of ten key-presses is a typing error. The solution I've imagined would be something equivalent to a Java programming bicycle. I went Web-spelunking and found a beta version of what promised to be the ideal solution to my short programming excursion needs -- someday. Then, just a couple of weeks ago, I was notified by e-mail that BeanShell 1.0 was available. I decided to take the tool for a ride.
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Copyright © 1999-2012 Juancarlo Añez, Caracas, Venezuela.![]()