Best Application Development Software for Linux - Page 20

Compare the Top Application Development Software for Linux as of November 2025 - Page 20

  • 1
    Giskard

    Giskard

    Giskard

    Giskard provides interfaces for AI & Business teams to evaluate and test ML models through automated tests and collaborative feedback from all stakeholders. Giskard speeds up teamwork to validate ML models and gives you peace of mind to eliminate risks of regression, drift, and bias before deploying ML models to production.
    Starting Price: $0
  • 2
    REI3

    REI3

    Lean Softworks GmbH

    REI3 is an open (free to use and open source) business application platform. Anyone can create, use and publish applications. A wide range of professionally designed applications help your organization manage time, assets, projects, passwords and much more. Available on all major platforms and deployable in the cloud or on-premise, REI3 can be used by anyone.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 3
    HiveMQ

    HiveMQ

    HiveMQ

    HiveMQ empowers businesses to unlock the full potential of their data with the most trusted edge-to-cloud IoT data streaming platform. Built on MQTT’s publish/subscribe architecture for seamless and flexible integration across operational technology (OT) assets and information technology (IT) applications, HiveMQ ensures businesses can efficiently connect, stream, and govern their data in real-time. With a focus on reliability, scalability, and security, HiveMQ helps organizations get their data AI-ready—enabling advanced analytics, predictive maintenance, and digital transformation. Leading brands like Audi, BMW, Liberty Global, Mercedes-Benz, Siemens, and Eli Lilly trust HiveMQ to modernize their operations, accelerate innovation, and create smarter, data-driven experiences. Visit hivemq.com to learn more.
  • 4
    Jmix

    Jmix

    Haulmont Technology

    Discover a rapid application development platform that supercharges your digital initiatives without low-code limitations, vendor dependency, and usage-based fees. Jmix general purpose open architecture based on a future-proof technology stack is capable to support various digital initiatives across the organization. Jmix applications are indeed yours and can be supported independently thanks to open-source runtime utilizing mainstream technologies. Your data is secure with a server-side frontend development model and fine-grained access control. Any Java or Kotlin developer is a full-stack Jmix developer - you don’t need separate backend and frontend teams. Visual tools help onboard developers who have little experience or move from an obsolete stack. Jmix’s data-centric approach and single development language make it a natural fit to migrate legacy applications. Jmix supercharges your team with high-productivity tools and ready-to-use components.
    Starting Price: $45 per month
  • 5
    MRTK-Unity

    MRTK-Unity

    Microsoft

    MRTK-Unity is a Microsoft-driven project that provides a set of components and features, used to accelerate cross-platform MR app development in Unity. Provides the cross-platform input system and building blocks for spatial interactions and UI. Enables rapid prototyping via in-editor simulation that allows you to see changes immediately. Operates as an extensible framework that provides developers the ability to swap out core components. A button control that supports various input methods, including HoloLens 2's articulated hand. Standard UI for manipulating objects in 3D space. Script for manipulating objects with one or two hands. 2D style plane which supports scrolling with articulated hand input. A script for making objects interactable with visual states and theme support. Various object positioning behaviors such as tag-along, body-lock, constant view size, and surface magnetism. Script for laying out an array of objects in a three-dimensional shape.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 6
    Emojicode

    Emojicode

    Emojicode

    Emojicode is an open-source, full-blown programming language, consisting of emojis. As a multi-paradigm language, Emojicode features object orientation, optionals, generics, closures, and protocols. Emojicode compiles native machine code using lots of optimizations that make your code fast. Emojicode comes with a comprehensive set of default packages. And you can easily write your own. We believe that Emojis have expressive force. Let’s use that to make programming more fun and accessible. Emojicode is a straightforward language to learn, whatever background you have. Our documentation is known to be excellent and stuffed with walk-through guides and examples. You can help Emojicode grow! Development takes place on GitHub and you’re invited to drop in. Before you install Emojicode make sure you have a C++ compiler and linker installed. clang++ or g++ is fine, for instance. The Emojicode compiler can only link binaries if such a compiler is available.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 7
    Forth

    Forth

    Forth

    Forth, the computer language was created for programming embedded and real-time applications. Today, it is available for developing applications on Windows, DOS, and variants of Unix that include macOS. Additionally, commercial-grade Forth cross-compilers generate highly optimized code that runs on a variety of microprocessors and microcontrollers and proves themselves very capable in custom-hardware environments. Forth is a high-level programming language, although most versions include an assembler. Fourth-system providers often include software tools to help application code make good use of system resources. Forth is interactive. It is conducive to developing modular, well-tested code in shorter development times. It can also result in very concise code. Some programmers are not accustomed to languages with such brevity, directness, and (apparent) simplicity. Forth has a reputation for rapid development, lean code, and superb performance.
    Starting Price: $399 one-time payment
  • 8
    Deno

    Deno

    Deno

    Deno is a simple, modern and secure runtime for JavaScript, TypeScript, and WebAssembly that uses V8 and is built in Rust. Deno comes with a manual which contains more in depth explanations about the more complex functions of the runtime, an introduction to the concepts that Deno is built on, details about the internals of Deno, how to embed Deno in your own application and how to extend Deno using Rust plugins. Next to the Deno runtime, Deno also provides a list of audited standard modules that are reviewed by the Deno maintainers and are guaranteed to work with a specific Deno version. These live in the denoland/deno_std repository.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 9
    Avalonia UI

    Avalonia UI

    Avalonia UI

    Avalonia UI enables developers to create multi-platform apps with .NET. Write once, and run everywhere. Save time and focus on your product. Considered a spiritual successor to WPF, Avalonia UI provides a familiar developer experience, allowing you to leverage years of pre-existing knowledge and investments. rusted by JetBrains as the best framework for modernizing their WPF-based tools, used by >170,000 companies, including 431 on the Fortune 500 list. Our developer community has grown enormously as Avalonia UI has grown in popularity. Join us and be welcomed into our supportive and vibrant community.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 10
    Katalon TestCloud
    Experience high-performance cross-browser and platform testing. Easily execute automated tests across the most common browsers and devices on the cloud while we take care of the heavy lifting, all accessible from your TestOps and Studio latest versions. QA teams and devs have the agility to handle ever-changing ecosystems and business needs. Effortless access to on-demand test environments with pre-configured setup. Enterprise-grade security to safeguard every step of the testing pipeline. Design, orchestrate, and execute all your tests within the Katalon platform. Users can design scripts with Studio, execute them using TestCloud, orchestrate the entire testing process, and gain insights using TestOps, within the same Katalon account. Test on any available browser, version, OS, or combination of the three. With TestCloud, QA engineers and testers are not limited to testing on available local environments or waiting for IT to deploy the ones they need.
    Starting Price: $25 per month
  • 11
    Apache TomEE
    Apache TomEE, pronounced “Tommy”, is an all-Apache Jakarta EE 9.1 certified application server that extends Apache Tomcat that is assembled from a vanilla Apache Tomcat zip file. We start with Apache Tomcat, add our jars, and zip up the rest. The result is Tomcat plus EE features, TomEE. Stable and ready for production, Apache TomEE 8.0 implements Java EE 8/Jakarta EE 8 and supports the javax namespace. Runs on Java 8 or higher. Mostly Jakarta EE 9.1 web profile compliant and supports the new jakarta namespace. Runs on Java 11 or higher. Apache TomEE comes in four different flavors, web profile, MicroProfile, Plus and Plume. Apache TomEE web profile delivers servlets, JSP, JSF, JTA, JPA, CDI, bean validation and EJB Lite. Apache TomEE MicroProfile adds support for MicroProfile. Apache TomEE Plus and Plume add support for JMS, JAX-WS, and more. Mostly Jakarta EE 9.1 Web Profile compliant and supports the new jakarta namespace.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 12
    Apache Geronimo
    Apache Geronimo is an open-source set of projects that are focused on providing JavaEE/JakartaEE libraries and Microprofile implementations. We are actively delivering reusable Java EE components though. They are widely used and still actively maintained! Apache Geronimo provides libraries for the implementations of the Java EE and Jakarta EE specifications. The implementations are also focused on providing OSGi bundle metadata. The goal of XBean project is to create a plugin-based server analogous to Eclipse is a plugin-based IDE. XBean will be able to discover, download and install server plugins from an Internet-based repository. In addition, we include support for multiple IoC systems, support for running with no IoC system, JMX without JMX code, lifecycle and class loader management, and rock-solid Spring integration. Apache Geronimo hosts several Microprofile implementations. Apache Geronimo Arthur is an effort to build a thin layer on top of Oracle GraalVM.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 13
    Clockspring

    Clockspring

    Clockspring

    Clockspring is the perfect balance between low-code automation tools and custom development. Traditional integration options are slow, fragile, and expensive. Clockspring delivers the same flexibility you get with custom programming but without the need to write any code. Maximize your existing technology and let your team focus on driving your business forward. Automation is changing the way that businesses operate, collaborate, and react to change. Clockspring's integration and automation platform respond to change in record time. Improve performance and accuracy by 30 - 50% by providing accurate data into the tools your analysts use. Connect any API, database, COTS product, or even your existing custom applications. Merge your on-prem, hybrid, and cloud tech stack into a single combined system instead of a series of data silos. Clockspring can do about 95% of what a programmer can do 10% of the time.
    Starting Price: $799/mo
  • 14
    Pulsar

    Pulsar

    Pulsar-Edit

    A community-led hyper-hackable text editor. Pulsar works across operating systems. Use it on OS X, Windows, or Linux. Search and install new packages or create your own right from Pulsar. Pulsar helps you write code faster with a smart and flexible autocomplete. Easily browse and open a single file, a whole project, or multiple projects in one window. Split your Pulsar interface into multiple panes to compare and edit code across files. Find, preview, and replace text as you type in a file or across all your projects.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 15
    Devel::Cover
    This module provides code coverage metrics for Perl. Code coverage metrics describe how thoroughly tests exercise code. By using Devel::Cover you can discover areas of code not exercised by your tests and determine which tests to create to increase coverage. Code coverage can be considered an indirect measure of quality. Devel::Cover is now quite stable and provides many of the features to be expected in a useful coverage tool. Statement, branch, condition, subroutine, and pod coverage information is reported. Statement and subroutine coverage data should be accurate. Branch and condition coverage data should be mostly accurate too, although not always what one might initially expect. Pod coverage comes from Pod::Coverage. If Pod::Coverage::CountParents is available it will be used instead.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 16
    LuaCov

    LuaCov

    LuaCov

    LuaCov is a simple coverage analyzer for Lua scripts. When a Lua script is run with the luacov module loaded, it generates a stats file with the number of executions of each line of the script and its loaded modules. The luacov command-line script then processes this file generating a report file which allows one to visualize which code paths were not traversed, which is useful for verifying the effectiveness of a test suite. LuaCov includes several configuration options, which have their defaults stored in src/luacov/defaults.lua. These are the global defaults. To use project specific configuration, create a Lua script setting options as globals or returning a table with some options and store it as .luacov in the project directory from where luacov is being run. For example, this config informs LuaCov that only foo module and its submodules should be covered and that they are located inside src directory.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 17
    Tarpaulin

    Tarpaulin

    Tarpaulin

    Tarpaulin is a code coverage reporting tool for the cargo build system, named for a waterproof cloth used to cover cargo on a ship. Currently, tarpaulin provides working line coverage and while fairly reliable may still contain minor inaccuracies in the results. A lot of work has been done to get it working on a wide range of projects, but often unique combinations of packages and build features can cause issues so please report anything you find that's wrong. Also, check out our roadmap for planned features. On Linux Tarpaulin's default tracing backend is still Ptrace and will only work on x86 and x64 processors. This can be changed to the llvm coverage instrumentation with engine llvm, for Mac and Windows this is the default collection method. It can also be run in Docker, which is useful for when you don't use Linux but want to run it locally.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 18
    grcov

    grcov

    grcov

    grcov collects and aggregates code coverage information for multiple source files. grcov processes .profraw and .gcda files which can be generated from llvm/clang or gcc. grcov also processes lcov files (for JS coverage) and JaCoCo files (for Java coverage). Linux, macOS and Windows are supported.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 19
    kcov

    kcov

    kcov

    Kcov is a FreeBSD/Linux/OSX code coverage tester for compiled languages, Python and Bash. Kcov was originally a fork of Bcov, but has since evolved to support a large feature set in addition to that of Bcov. Kcov, like Bcov, uses DWARF debugging information for compiled programs to make it possible to collect coverage information without special compiler switches.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 20
    test_coverage
    A simple command-line tool to collect test coverage information from Dart VM tests. It is useful if you need to generate coverage reports locally during development.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 21
    coverage

    coverage

    pub.dev

    Coverage provides coverage data collection, manipulation, and formatting for Dart. Collect_coverage collects coverage JSON from the Dart VM Service. format_coverage formats JSON coverage data into either LCOV or pretty-printed format.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 22
    scct

    scct

    scct

    Mainly, a better-lookin' report UI, a simpler maven configuration. Add the plugin instrumentation settings to child projects and the report merging settings to the parent project.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 23
    cloverage

    cloverage

    cloverage

    Cloverage uses clojure.test by default. If you prefer use midje, pass the --runner :midje flag. (In older versions of Cloverage, you had to wrap your midje tests in clojure.test's deftest. This is no longer necessary.) For using eftest, pass the --runner :eftest flag. Optionally you could configure a runner passing :runner-opts with a map in project settings. Other test libraries may ship with their own support for Cloverage external to this library; see their documentation for details.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 24
    Slather

    Slather

    Slather

    Generate test coverage reports for Xcode projects & hook it into CI. Enable test coverage by ticking the "Gather coverage data" checkbox when editing a scheme.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 25
    QML
    QML is a declarative language that allows user interfaces to be described in terms of their visual components and how they interact and relate with one another. It is a highly readable language that was designed to enable components to be interconnected in a dynamic manner, and it allows components to be easily reused and customized within a user interface. Using the QtQuick module, designers and developers can easily build fluid animated user interfaces in QML, and have the option of connecting these user interfaces to any back-end C++ libraries. QML is a user interface specification and programming language. It allows developers and designers alike to create highly performant, fluidly animated and visually appealing applications. QML offers a highly readable, declarative, JSON-like syntax with support for imperative JavaScript expressions combined with dynamic property bindings.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 26
    SystemC

    SystemC

    SystemC

    Your online reference for everything related to SystemC, the language for system-level design, high-level synthesis, modeling and verification. SystemC™ addresses the need for a system design and verification language that spans hardware and software. It is a language built in standard C++ by extending the language with the use of class libraries. The language is particularly suited to model system's partitioning, to evaluate and verify the assignment of blocks to either hardware or software implementations, and to architect and measure the interactions between and among functional blocks. Leading companies in the intellectual property (IP), electronic design automation (EDA), semiconductor, electronic systems, and embedded software industries currently use SystemC for architectural exploration, to deliver high-performance hardware blocks at various levels of abstraction and to develop virtual platforms for hardware/software co-design.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 27
    NCover

    NCover

    NCover

    NCover Desktop is a Windows application that helps you collect code coverage statistics for .NET applications and services. After coverage is collected, Desktop displays charts and coverage metrics in a browser-based GUI that allows you to drill all the way down to your individual lines of source code. Desktop also allows you the option to install a Visual Studio extension called Bolt. Bolt offers built-in code coverage that displays unit test results, timings, branch visualization and source code highlighting right in the Visual Studio IDE. NCover Desktop is a major leap forward in the ease and flexibility of code coverage tools. Code coverage, gathered while testing your .NET code, shows the NCover user what code was exercised during the test and gives a specific measurement of unit test coverage. By tracking these statistics over time, you gain a concrete measurement of code quality during the development cycle.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 28
    dotPeek

    dotPeek

    JetBrains

    As soon as you've decompiled an assembly, you can save it as a Visual Studio project (.csproj). This can potentially save a lot of time if you need to restore lost source code from a legacy assembly. dotPeek can identify local source code based on PDB files, or fetch source code from source servers such as Microsoft Reference Source Center or SymbolSource. dotPeek can also perform as a symbol server and supply Visual Studio debugger with the information required to debug assembly code. dotPeek inherits a lot of features from ReSharper. These include contextual and context-insensitive navigation, usage search, as well as different code structure and hierarchy views. Use Find Usages to search for all usages of a symbol, be it a method, property, local variable or a different entity. The Find Results tool window lets you group usages, navigate between them, and open them in the code view area.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 29
    JaCoCo

    JaCoCo

    EclEmma

    JaCoCo is a free code coverage library for Java, which has been created by the EclEmma team based on the lessons learned from using and integrating existing libraries for many years. The master branch of JaCoCo is automatically built and published. Due to the test-driven development approach, every build is considered fully functional. See the change history for the latest features and bug fixes. SonarQube code quality metrics of the current JaCoCo implementation are available on SonarCloud.io. Integrate JaCoCo technology with your tools. Use JaCoCo tools out of the box. Improve the implementation and add new features. There are several open-source coverage technologies for Java available. While implementing the Eclipse plug-in EclEmma the observation was that none of them are really designed for integration. Most of them are specifically fit to a particular tool (Ant tasks, command line, IDE plug-in) and do not offer a documented API that allows embedding in different contexts.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 30
    OpenClover

    OpenClover

    OpenClover

    Balance your effort spent on writing applications and test code. Use the most sophisticated code coverage tool for Java and Groovy. OpenClover measures code coverage for Java and Groovy and collects over 20 code metrics. It not only shows you untested areas of your application but also combines coverage and metrics to find the riskiest code. The Test Optimization feature tracks which test cases are related to each class of your application code. Thanks to this OpenClover can run tests relevant to changes made in your application code, significantly reducing test execution time. Do testing getters and setters bring much value? Or machine-generated code? OpenClover outruns other tools in its flexibility to define the scope of coverage measurement. You can exclude packages, files, classes, methods, and even single statements. You can focus on testing important parts of your code. OpenClover not only records test results but also measures individual code coverage for every test.
    Starting Price: Free