Coding on a Android Tablet or Smartphone Recently at my collegues have spent a lot of time traveling to different conferences such as. One of the complaints my colleagues have is the amount of luggage they have to carry, especially when they still want to work on code for our, and a. Having previously written a article on the as I spend a lot of my time on the web development and designing side of things, it occurred to me that Android is an extremely powerful platform (and ) and I would be sure to find useful Apps and IDE’s for Java Coders and Programmers. So to help make things easier for them, and with my keen interest in technology and love of gadgets I grabbed my trusty Android Phone to see what I could find.
JavaIDEdroid is an IDE (integrated development environment) which can run on Android and allows you to natively create Android applications without the need to use the Android SDK on Mac, Windows or Linux. JavaIDEdroid comes equipped with an aapt tool, compiler for Java, dx tool, DexMerger tool, ApkBuilder, zipsigner-lib (this library also does the zipalign), SpongyCastle Library, BeanShell Interpreter and JavaRunner, which allows running of any binary Java command line applications (.jar file). Java Editor is a very easy to use and simple Java editor. It’s limited in functionality but it can color the syntax nodes, attributes, properties, events and also supports auto-completion and search and replace.
Install Eclipse IDE for C/C++ Developers on Mac OSX Install Eclipse for RCP and RAP Developers on Mac OSX Install Java Standard Edition Development Kit on Mac OSX.
It can open default files with the extensions jav & java. DroidEdit is a text and source code editor (similar to Notepad++ on the PC) and is available for android tablets and phones. DroidEdit is supported by android tablets with external keyboards like the Asus Transformer or those with third party external keyboards, there is also support for. It also supports a variety of languages like C, C++, C#, Java, HTML, CSS, Javascript, Python, Ruby, Lua, LaTeX, and SQL.
There is also a premium version with SFTP/FTP, Dropbox, Drive and Box support (great if you are on the move), custom themes (for those that want to customize everything), external commands through SSH and root mode. Dcoder is a mobile coding IDE that is designed to help you learn programming. It supports over 30 programming languages, including Java, C, C++, Python, C#, PHP and Ruby. It has a Rich Text Editor which has syntax highlighting, some autocomplete features and undo/redo.
It also comes with algorithm problems for you to solve, to help you learn. Code Peeker Pro comes with syntax highlighting, and allows you to look up snippets.
Although not an editor, it is a useful code reader and has been selected to be part of the Google Play for Education program and is currently used in schools as a teaching aid. Thanks for great collection! Java Code Viewer is also a good one. Java Code Viewer has a relatively misleading name. You can view Java code, but you can also view C#, C/C++, CSS, PHP, ASP and JavaScript.
Therefore, the name really doesn’t do the app justice. This app is about as simple as a code viewer can get. It has great syntax highlighting, word find, and line numbers. So, if programers are looking for an extremely stripped down, simple, easy to use code viewer, Java Code Viewer might be the app for you. Besides, Java Code Viewer is completely free! I used to utilize TerminalIDE, but since os5, introducing PIE (position independant ececutables or something ), the IDE part is rendered almost useless, so i’ll continue using it on my old ones, but for the newer ones (time has to go on, and some of us want/need to follow), i’m happy and thankful for this short overview.
#18: B4A is a win-exe. On the road, in the wild and in some certain situations even in my city-life i don’t have/want to use a PC, specially since LapTops (even more NetBooks) are shorter in power than almost any DeskTop-“MainFrame”. On the other hand, those handhelds are more powerful than those old win95-pcs, therefore they’re worth coding on them.
![Ide For Mac That Uses Java Ide For Mac That Uses Java](https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/figures/getStarted/nb-javatutorial-project2.png)
BUT running some vm with an ancient win – there will anyone lose any speed.