You can probably switch back to the JDK 14 now. Now the plugin C/C++ appears in the list. In the tab Available Plugins, the list of plugins must now be updated via Check for Newest. I have activated the NetBeans 8.2 Plugin Portal in Tools > Plugins > Settings. There is no official C/C++ plugin for Netbeans 11 yet, but the plugin for Netbeans 8 works fine. Here comes the second point where the change from Oracle to Apache becomes noticeable. To develop in Netbeans for C/C++, an appropriate plugin must be installed. The plugin manager of Netbeans, does not seem to be able to cope with that either. In contrast to a post on stack overflow you should not switch back to JDK 14 yet. I copied the content of this directory into C:\Program Files\Jave\jdk-14.0.1 and overwrote all existing files. The ZIP file contains a directory “jdk-13.0.2”. Now I unpacked openjdk-13.0.2_windows-圆4_bin.zip. First I made a copy of jdk-14.0.1 in jdk-14.0.1_copy in the same directory. This can be found under C:\Program Files\Jave\jdk-14.0.1. The easiest way seems to be to overwrite the existing JDK installation with the old version. I decided to take the harder path and used openJDK 13. For that I would have had to register with Oracle, which I did not feel like doing. Now I could have simply downloaded an older JDK version.
#Netbeans 8.2 and jdk 11 install
The solution: install an older version of the JDK.
#Netbeans 8.2 and jdk 11 how to
Here is a post on Stack Overflow on this topic: How to fix Netbeans IDE installation error?. When you try to install Netbeans, an error message is displayedĪfter a short research on the net it is clear that the installer is not compatible with the current JDK version 14. Installationįirst of all I downloaded the current Netbeans Version 11.3 and the current Java SE Development Kit 14. Two times, however, manual action was required to get Netbeans running as desired. Meanwhile Netbeans almost shines again in its old glory.
But true fans remain loyal to their software. Initially it made working with Netbeans very difficult. The transition of the code to Apache is being done piecemeal and does not seem to have been completed yet.
Netbeans was given to the Apache Foundation by Oracle a few years ago. Eclipse probably brings similar features. Netbeans brings everything I need: an extensive editor, remote host support, etc. It makes more sense to develop on the PC and run the software on the RevPi, if possible without manual interaction.Īfter a short research my choice fell on Netbeans. For the use of a modern development environment the Pi lacks a little bit of power. To develop on the Revolution or the Raspberry Pi itself is extremely laborious.