IDEs

Introduction

Can explain IDEs

Professional software engineers often write code using Integrated Development Environments (IDEs). IDEs support all development-related work within the same tool.

An IDE generally consists of:

  • A source code editor that includes features such as syntax coloring, auto-completion, easy code navigation, error highlighting, and code-snippet generation.
  • A compiler and/or an interpreter (together with other build automation support) that facilitates the compilation/linking/running/deployment of a program.
  • A debugger that allows the developer to execute the program one step at a time to observe the run-time behavior in order to locate bugs.
  • Other tools that aid various aspects of coding e.g. support for automated testing, drag-and-drop construction of UI components, version management support, simulation of the target runtime platform, and modeling support.

Examples of popular IDEs:

  • Java: Eclipse, Intellij IDEA, NetBeans
  • C#, C++: Visual Studio
  • Swift: XCode
  • Python: PyCharm

Some Web-based IDEs have appeared in recent times too e.g., Amazon's Cloud9 IDE.

Some experienced developers, in particular those with a UNIX background, prefer lightweight yet powerful text editors with scripting capabilities (e.g. Emacs) over heavier IDEs.

  • a. Compiling
  • b. Syntax error highlighting
  • c. Debugging
  • d. Code navigation e.g., to navigate from a method call to the method implementation
  • e. Simulation e.g., run a mobile app in a simulator
  • f. Code analysis e.g. to find unreachable code
  • g. Reverse engineering design/documentation e.g. generate diagrams from code
  • h. Visual programming e.g. Write programs using ‘drag and drop’ actions instead of typing code
  • i. Syntax assistance e.g., show hints as you type
  • j. Code generation e.g., to generate the code required by simply specifying which component/structure you want to implement
  • k. Extension i.e., ability add more functionality to the IDE using plugins

All.

Explanation: While all of these features may not be present in some IDEs, most do have these features in some form or other.

Debugging

Can explain debugging

Debugging is the process of discovering defects in the program. Here are some approaches to debugging:

  • Bad -- By inserting temporary print statements: This is an ad-hoc approach in which print statements are inserted in the program to print information relevant to debugging, such as variable values. e.g. Exiting process() method, x is 5.347. This approach is not recommended due to these reasons.

    • Incurs extra effort when inserting and removing the print statements.
    • Unnecessary program modifications increases the risk of introducing errors into the program.
    • These print statements, if not promptly removed, may even appear unexpectedly in the production version.
  • Bad -- By manually tracing through the code: Otherwise known as ‘eye-balling’, this approach doesn't have the cons of the previous approach, but it too is not recommended (other than as a 'quick try') due to these reasons:

    • It is difficult, time consuming, and error-prone technique.
    • If you didn't spot the error while writing code, you might not spot the error when reading code too.
  • Good -- Using a debugger: A debugger tool allows you to pause the execution, then step through one statement at a time while examining the internal state if necessary. Most IDEs come with an inbuilt debugger. This is the recommended approach for debugging.