diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'documentation/getting-started/getting-started-overview.adoc')
-rw-r--r-- | documentation/getting-started/getting-started-overview.adoc | 7 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/documentation/getting-started/getting-started-overview.adoc b/documentation/getting-started/getting-started-overview.adoc index 6adde0a9b4..3cf8b870f4 100644 --- a/documentation/getting-started/getting-started-overview.adoc +++ b/documentation/getting-started/getting-started-overview.adoc @@ -7,16 +7,15 @@ layout: page [[getting-started.overview]] = Overview -Once you have installed a development environment, as described in the previous chapter, creating a Vaadin project proceeds in the IDE that you have chosen. +Once you have installed a development environment, as described in the previous chapter, creating a Vaadin Framework project proceeds in the IDE that you have chosen. -The Vaadin core library and all Vaadin add-ons are available through Maven, a commonly used build and dependency management system. +The Vaadin Framework core library and all Vaadin add-ons are available through Maven, a commonly used build and dependency management system. The recommended way to create a Vaadin application project is to use a Maven archetype. The archetypes contain all the needed dependencies, which Maven takes care of. -The Eclipse IDE plugin currently also supports creating a normal Eclipse web project using the Ivy dependency manager. In this chapter, we: -* Give an overview of the Vaadin libraries +* Give an overview of the Vaadin Framework libraries * List the available Maven archetypes * Give step-by-step instructions for creating a project in the Eclipse IDE, NetBeans IDE, and IntelliJ IDEA, as well as with command-line. |