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---
title: Overview
order: 1
layout: page
---
[[getting-started.overview]]
= Overview
You can develop Vaadin applications in essentially any development environment
that has the Java SDK and a Java Servlet container. Vaadin has special support
for the Eclipse and NetBeans IDEs, but community support exists also for
IntelliJ IDEA. You can use it with any Java IDE or no IDE at all.
Managing Vaadin and other Java libraries can get tedious to do manually, so
using a build system that manages dependencies automatically is adviced. Vaadin
is distributed in the Maven central repository, and can be used with any build
or dependency management system that can access Maven repository, such as Ivy or
Gradle, in addition to Maven.
Vaadin has a multitude of installation options for different IDEs, dependency
managers, and you can also install it from an installation package:
* With the Eclipse IDE, use the Vaadin Plugin for Eclipse, as described in <<dummy/../../../framework/getting-started/getting-started-eclipse#getting-started.eclipse,"Vaadin Plugin for Eclipse">>
* With the Vaadin plugin for NetBeans IDE ( <<dummy/../../../framework/getting-started/getting-started-netbeans#getting-started.netbeans,"Creating a Project with NetBeans IDE">>) or IntelliJ IDEA
* With Maven, Ivy, Gradle, or other Maven-compatible dependency manager, under Eclipse, NetBeans, IDEA, or using command-line, as described in <<dummy/../../../framework/getting-started/getting-started-maven#getting-started.maven,"Using Vaadin with Maven">>
* From installation package without dependency management, as described in <<dummy/../../../framework/getting-started/getting-started-package#getting-started.package,"Vaadin Installation Package">>
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