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PHP Development Tools (PDT) is a language IDE plugin for the Eclipse platform and the open-source project that develops it. The project intends to encompass all tools necessary to develop PHP based software. It uses the existing Eclipse Web Tools Project to provide developers with PHP capabilities.
In June 2011, a proposal [8] was created to transform the code into an Eclipse Foundation project. This proposal was adopted in November 2011. A part of the migration to the Eclipse Foundation was the conversion of RIF to the current version of ReqIF 1.0.1. In the spring of 2012 DEPLOY and Verde opted out of the research projects.
CodeLite – an open source, cross platform IDE for C/C++ and PHP. The built-in plugins supports SVN, SSH/SFTP access, Git database browsing and others. Eclipse – PHP Development Tools (PDT) and PHPEclipse projects. With additional plugins supports SVN, CVS, database modelling, SSH/FTP access, database navigation, Trac integration, and others.
The Eclipse Web Tools Platform (WTP) project is an extension of the Eclipse platform with tools for developing Web and Java EE applications. It includes source and graphical editors for a variety of languages, wizards and built-in applications to simplify development, and tools and APIs to support deploying, running, and testing apps. [90]
The Eclipse Project was originally created by IBM in November 2001 and was supported by a consortium of software vendors. In 2004, the Eclipse Foundation was founded to lead and develop the Eclipse community. [4] It was created to allow a vendor-neutral, open, and transparent community to be established around Eclipse. [3]
For example, a Java project can be compiled with the compiler-plugin's compile-goal [9] by running mvn compiler:compile. There are Maven plugins for building, testing, source control management, running a web server, generating Eclipse project files, and much more. [10] Plugins are introduced and configured in a <plugins>-section of a pom.xml ...
In the 2.0 version, Aptana did not provide its own PHP plugin, but transferred development efforts to the PDT project. Aptana version 1.5 provided support for developing PHP applications via the add-on PHP plugin. This included: Built-in PHP server for previewing within Aptana Studio, Full code assist, code outlining and code formatting,
According to Ed Merks, EMF project lead, "Ecore is the defacto reference implementation of OMG's EMOF" (Essential Meta-Object Facility). Still according to Merks, EMOF was actually defined by OMG as a simplified version of the more comprehensive 'C'MOF by drawing on the experience of the successful simplification of Ecore's original implementation.