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I did a grammar with antlr4 and I was wondering what tools are available to create a IDE for my own language. I'd like to make an IDE that supports syntax highlighting, syntax checker and autocompletion. However, I've no idea where to start.
Does anybody has already done one based on a Antlr4 grammar ?
Thanks,
Adrien
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As simple as that. My programming teacher do it and I want to know how to do it.
Thanks!
You just need to press up/down key.
Here you have a terminal guide for beginners.
Have a good day!
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When I worked for my previous company, I used BeyondCompare to compare directories containing codes. After switching to a new company, I became to use Linux. For the same code comparison purpose, I started using tkdiff. But, the GUI of tkdiff is not as good as BeyondCompare, and it seems that tkdiff cannot compare directories with multiple files. Could anyone suggest what would be the best free source comparison tool I can use in Linux environment?
in my work , I use Meld (http://meldmerge.org/)
best Regards!
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On the wikipedia page only Haskell and Miranda are mentioned.
I am not sure about elm.
Some other languages make it especially easy to declare a function to be computed lazily.
Are there programming languages where you have a global switch, say for a module or script file to be evaluated lazily?
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I need a way to query Google programmatically and then read the "clean text" inside every URL. What is the best way to do it or if any tools already exists?
Programming language: preferably Java, Python or C#
You can use a Web Crawler to do this. Most programming languages have some sort of library that does this. For example if you use python, you can use Scrapy.
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I have just started learning python and I have a question. I have a text file which I opened. The file has random questions. Now my question is how can I search for any question similar to this type of question "what is your .... " and "how do you ...." and return the whole question . I am using python 3.x. Please help
I highly suggest you spend some time reading about regex. The trick would be to search for a string that includes the first words you want (the "What is your" statement) and ends with a question mark. The following docs should give you quite a bit of clarity.
https://docs.python.org/3.4/library/re.html
https://docs.python.org/3.4/howto/regex.html#regex-howto