Search |
||
a well rounded package in JulietPosted by alanwilliamson on July 30, 2003 at 6:13 AM PDT
It was at the end of day#3 at JavaOne and I was tired. I was tired of product pitches, tired of talking, and tired of listening to all the hype. I was collapsed in a chair looking forward to heading over to the JBoss Matrix showing so I could sit in a dark room and not have to speak to anyone without feeling guilty. So it probably wasn't the best time to be coming up to me and trying to pitch me an idea! But someone did! Carlo Walentiny of Infotectonica stepped forward and in a quiet voice give me his standard elevator pitch. I still wasn't impressed or even paying attention I think, but he pushed forward and opened up his laptop to show me a demo of something he called Juliet.
When he opened it up, I woke up out of my trance. I was instantly impressed. I had no idea what the hell it did at that moment because I wasn't really listening before. The GUI wasn't Swing, and it wasn't SWT, it was his own! And man did it look stunning. It was doing some sort of analysis of java code files, which was taken some time. But the way he fed back this wait to the user was not only innovative but useful. It was at this point I was hooked. Anyone that could put as much care to detail as that, deserved my full attention.
One of the really nice things with Juliet is the interface. A lot of thought has gone into this and it is this that won me over to begin with. The way you organize queries and group results together is very slick and its not long before you are presented with a Venn diagram window to ask you how you wish your results to be merged. Very nice touch. So who or what is Juliet aimed at? It is an ideal tool for anyone that has to review code changes before they are committed to a CVS branch for example. Also very useful for open-source projects where you want to get a feel for the whole source branch as a whole without necessarily loading into an IDE. If you need to get up to speed quickly on a sizeable chunk of code, then Juliet is the tool for you. »
Related Topics >>
Tools Comments
Comments are listed in date ascending order (oldest first)
|
||
|
|