IntelliJ IDEA
Integrated development environment From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Integrated development environment From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
IntelliJ IDEA (/ɪnˈtɛlɪdʒeɪ aɪˈdiːə/[2]) is an integrated development environment (IDE) written in Java for developing computer software written in Java, Kotlin, Groovy, and other JVM-based languages. It is developed by JetBrains (formerly known as IntelliJ) and is available as an Apache 2 Licensed community edition,[3] and in a proprietary commercial edition. Both can be used for commercial development.[4][5]
Developer(s) | JetBrains |
---|---|
Initial release | 1.0 / January 2001 |
Stable release | |
Written in | Java, Kotlin |
Operating system | Windows, macOS, Linux |
Type | Java IDE |
License |
|
Website | www |
The first version of IntelliJ IDEA was released in January 2001 and was one of the first available Java IDEs with advanced code navigation and code refactoring capabilities integrated.[6][7]
In 2009, JetBrains released the source code for IntelliJ IDEA under the open-source Apache License 2.0.[8][9] JetBrains also began distributing a limited version of IntelliJ IDEA consisting of open-source features under the moniker Community Edition. The commercial Ultimate Edition provides additional features and remains available for a fee.
In a 2010 InfoWorld report, IntelliJ received the highest test center score out of the four top Java programming tools: Eclipse, IntelliJ IDEA, NetBeans and JDeveloper.[10]
In December 2014, Google announced version 1.0 of Android Studio, an open-source IDE for Android apps, based on the open source community edition.[11] Other development environments based on IntelliJ's framework include AppCode, CLion, DataGrip, GoLand, PhpStorm, PyCharm, Rider, RubyMine, WebStorm, and MPS.[12]
In September 2020, Huawei announced and released version 1.0 of DevEco Studio, an open-source IDE for HarmonyOS apps development, based on Jetbrains IntelliJ IDEA with Huawei's SmartAssist for Windows and macOS.[13]
Windows | macOS | Linux | |
---|---|---|---|
Operating system version | 64-bit Windows 10, version 1809 (or Windows Server 2019) or later | macOS Monterey or later | A Linux 6.x distribution with glibc 2.28 or later that supports GNOME, KDE |
RAM | 2 GB free RAM minimum; 8 GB RAM recommended | ||
Disk space | 3.5 GB required; a solid-state drive with at least 5 GB of free space is recommended | ||
JDK version | JDK 7 to 21 supported[15] | ||
JRE version | Bundled with Java 17 | ||
Screen resolution | At least 1024×768 is required; at least 1920×1080 is recommended |
The IDE provides certain features[16] like code completion by analyzing the context, code navigation which allows jumping to a class or declaration in the code directly, code refactoring, code debugging[17] , linting and options to fix inconsistencies via suggestions.
The IDE provides[16] integration with build/packaging tools like Grunt, bower, Gradle, and sbt. It supports databases like Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle, PostgreSQL, SQLite, and MySQL can be accessed directly from the IDE in the Ultimate edition, through an embedded version of DataGrip, another IDE developed by JetBrains.
IntelliJ IDEA supports plugins through which one can add additional functionality to the IDE. Plugins can be downloaded and installed either from IntelliJ's plugin repository website or through the IDE's built-in plugin search and install feature. Each edition has separate plugin repositories, with the Community edition supporting over 7,600 plugins, and the Ultimate edition supporting over 8,300 plugins, as of November 2024.[18]
The Community and Ultimate editions differ in their support for various programming languages as shown in the following table.[19]
Supported in both Community and Ultimate Edition: |
Supported in both Community and Ultimate Edition via plugins:
|
Supported only in Ultimate Edition: |
Supported only in Ultimate Edition via plugins:
|
Source:[19]
Supported in both Community and Ultimate Edition: |
Supported only in Ultimate Edition:
|
There was a free plugin from Atlassian for IntelliJ available to integrate with JIRA,[32] Bamboo, Crucible and FishEye. However, the software, called IDE-Connector, was discontinued on June 1, 2015.[33]
The two editions also differ in their support[19] for software versioning and revision control systems.
Supported in both Community and Ultimate Edition:
|
Supported only in Ultimate Edition:
|
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