Difference between revisions of "Software:Tools"
(→Programming Environments, Compilers) |
(→Debuggers and profilers) |
||
Line 37: | Line 37: | ||
==Debuggers and profilers== | ==Debuggers and profilers== | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
* [[Software:gdb|gdb]] | * [[Software:gdb|gdb]] |
Revision as of 14:30, 19 May 2016
This category contains Development Tools such as editors, compilers, debuggers, etc., as well as other tools such as visualization software. In many cases there is no need to do a separate set-up for this software, as it is usually installed in systems directories. If a set-up is required, it is usually done with the usepackage facility, i.e. through the use command.
Editors
Powerful editing written originally by Richard Stallman and is common to most Unix systems.
Multi-purpose text editor for the X Window System with a standard, easy to use, graphical user interface.
Text editor for Unix and Unix-based computer systems. Very simple.
Text editor originally written by Bill Joy in 1976. Comes standard with Unix environments. Not graphically driven.
Programming Environments, Compilers
- Intel C/C++ compiler for Linux/Intel computers. Auto-parallelization and OpenMP compiler directives.
- Intel Fortran compiler for Linux/Intel computers. Auto-parallelization and OpenMP compiler directives.
- Gnu C/C++ compiler for Linux. Understands OpenMP compiler directives.
- Gnu Fortran compiler for Linux/Intel computers. Understands OpenMP compiler directives.
- Easy to learn programming language with a clean syntax (and lots of packages).
Debuggers and profilers
Standard tool for debugging C code compiled with gcc.
Visualization
- Open-source, multi-platform data analysis and visualization application. Works both interactively and in batch mode.
- Open-source, multi-platform graphics software.