I'm more interested in whether or not there are any projects in the works
that fuse the tools together to build a better IDE experience. I forget
which presentation it was, but one of the developers (I *think* it was the
gentleman that presented something on CLANG at the dev's conference 2008)
made a bit of a point by saying that LLVM, unlike GCC has been built from
the ground up with tooling in mind. I appreciate that the tools that ship
with LLVM use the foundation in place, however, I am curious as to whether
there are any IDE projects that are building further upon this.
Granville
On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 7:47 PM, Bill Wendling <isanbard at gmail.com>
wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 6:04 AM, Granville
> Barnett<granvillebarnett at googlemail.com> wrote:
> > Hi,
> > I seem to remember that a big point of LLVM being built with tooling
> support
> > out of the box was a major thing, however, I've not read anything
about
> any
> > tools which are actually taking advantage of the foundation LLVM
> provides.
> > I'm not a Mac user, but I'd assume XCode would be a prime
candidate -
> > does/will XCode use LLVMs foundation to create a better IDE
experience?
> > Also, anyone know of similar efforts for Linux-based IDEs?
>
> Hi Granville,
>
> Clang itself takes advantage of the LLVM libraries
> (http://clang.llvm.org/). The static analyzer takes advantage of the
> clang libraries (same URL). There are a host of tools in the tools/
> sub-directory, which all use the LLVM libraries.
>
> :-)
>
> -bw
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