What you find in this directory: CurrentRelease/ Shortcuts to the current stable release (sources and binaries for each architecture). Builds/X.Y_Z Current (and older) ECLiPSe versions X.Y with build number Z. You should download the latest build number available, because it will contain the latest bug fixes. Apart from that, differences between builds of the same release number will be minimal. New builds appear every couple of days, and are not normally a reason to upgrade, unless they fix a bug that affects you. Download binaries from the subdirectory appropriate for your hardware and operating system, e.g. i386_nt Windows NT/XP/7/8/10 etc 32-bit x86_64_nt Windows NT/XP/7/8/10 etc 64-bit i386_linux Intel/Linux 32-bit x86_64_linux Intel/Linux 64-bit armv7_linux ARM/Linux 32-bit (e.g. Raspberry Pi 2/3/4) aarch64_linux ARM/Linux 64-bit (e.g. Raspberry Pi 3/4) x86_64_macosx Intel/MacOS-X 64-bit i386_sunos5 Intel/Solaris 32-bit sparc_sunos5 Sparc/Solaris 32-bit Not every build is guaranteed to have binaries for all architectures! We recommend to use older ECLiPSe versions only if you have an unusual compatibility problem. Dev/ Development pre-releases, containing the latest features/additions. These builds have successfully passed the test suite, but may contain features that are incompatible with the current stable release, and/or not yet documented. They may also lack recent bug fixes that have so far only been applied to the stable version. pub/ Sources of third-party libraries that are packaged with ECLiPSe, if required by their licence conditions. thirdparty/ Sources for third-party components to which ECLiPSe can interface. These are usually only needed when building ECLiPSe (or the corresponding interfaces) from source. Saros/ Plugin for eclipse framework (www.eclipse.org). Saros provides an IDE for ECLiPSe within eclipse. Most of the facilities (except the integrated editor) is provided by the Tcl/Tk based GUI that is distributed with ECLiPSe. Editors ECLiPSe support/ Distribution of support files for various popular editors, providing syntax highlighting and other features for these editors with ECLiPSe source files. ========================================= Choice of 64 vs 32 bit: For the processors we distribute, the 32 bit version of ECLiPSe also runs on the 64 bit version of the OS, so you can choose which to use. * 64 bit can address >4G (32 bit) of address space, so programs that consumes >4G of memory can be run. * most data representation requires twice as much space on 64 bit, so about twice as much memory as on 32 bit will be consumed running the same program. [Exception: reals (floating points) are represented more directly on 64 bit, and consume less memory than on 32 bit] * performance (execution speed) should be similar for 64 and 32 bit for most operations. There may be slight differences (5-10%) depending on processor/OS. Operations involving reals and large (33-64 bit) integers should be faster with 64 bit.