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Gradle is a build automation tool for multi-language software development. It controls the development process in the tasks of compilation and packaging to testing, deployment, and publishing. It controls the development process in the tasks of compilation and packaging to testing, deployment, and publishing.
Clover comes with a number of integrations both developed by Atlassian (Ant, Maven, Grails, Eclipse, IDEA, Bamboo) and by open source community (Gradle, Griffon, Jenkins, Hudson, Sonar). In April 2017, Atlassian announced that they would no longer release new versions of Clover after version 4.1.2, and its code was made available as open-source ...
The first version of IntelliJ IDEA was released in January 2000 and was one of the first available Java IDEs with advanced code navigation and code refactoring capabilities integrated. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] In 2009, JetBrains released the source code for IntelliJ IDEA under the open-source Apache License 2.0.
Android Studio is the official [6] integrated development environment (IDE) for Google's Android operating system, built on JetBrains' IntelliJ IDEA software and designed specifically for Android development. [7]
JetBrains s.r.o. (formerly IntelliJ Software s.r.o.) is a Czech [3] software development private limited company which makes tools for software developers and project managers. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] The company has its headquarters in Prague , and has offices in China, Europe, and the United States.
Some IDEs, like IntelliJ IDEA, NetBeans and Eclipse, support generating Javadoc template comment blocks. [3] The @tag syntax of Javadoc markup has been re-used by other documentation generators, including Doxygen, JSDoc, EDoc and HeaderDoc.
The earliest known work (1989) on continuous integration was the Infuse environment developed by G. E. Kaiser, D. E. Perry, and W. M. Schell. [4]In 1994, Grady Booch used the phrase continuous integration in Object-Oriented Analysis and Design with Applications (2nd edition) [5] to explain how, when developing using micro processes, "internal releases represent a sort of continuous integration ...
SpotBugs is the spiritual successor of FindBugs, carrying on from the point where it left off with support of its community. In 2016, the project lead of FindBugs was inactive but there are many issues in its community so Andrey Loskutov gave an announcement [16] to its community, and some volunteers tried creating a project with support for modern Java platform and better maintainability.