Programming Languages (336 programs)
Pros: Multi-threading support. Can open empty projects. Blank project templates to give you creative freedom. Strong inter-project dependency setup.
Cons: Must have Qt tools pre-installed. Dense coding. Poor code completion. Lots of limitations.
Pros: Really easy to use once you've read the instrutions.
Cons: Not intuitive.
Pros: Easy to understand interface. Quickly compiles JAR files.
Cons: Interface is old-school.
Pros: Programming-focused features. Free and open-source. Solid UI for advanced users. Great syntax support.
Cons: Takes time to learn. Minimal support. Can run slow. Speed varies between platforms.
Pros: Easy-to-use interface. Ready-made buttons and scripts. Easily customizable.
Cons: Remains initially challenging for beginner users.
Pros: Native cross-platform development (iOS, Android, Windows, macOS). Full-featured IDE with powerful integrated debugging tools. Visual UI design with VCL and FireMonkey frameworks. Free license for individuals and small organizations up to revenue.
Cons: Strict revenue cap of for commercial use.
Pros: Get the most out of Dev-C++. Have a IDE/RAD tool for development. Provide visual input from Dev-C++. Do programming and coding easier.
Cons: Only an extension and not an independent software. May not be updated. Professional Dev-C++ users might not need this software. Visually confusing for beginners.
Pros: Straightforward interface. Generates three kinds of exe files. Operates on both Linux and Windows. Supports 32- and 64-bit exe files.
Cons: All new processes entail going through each step. May not work well with JDK 1.8. Configuration settings could be confusing. Not for expert users.