Jan-24-2018, 12:22 PM
(This post was last modified: Jan-24-2018, 12:38 PM by foodmonkey.)
ok guys - shoot me down in flames
i've used visual studio on windows platform - it was the only sanctioned ms specific one for the code i was writing
it DOES have a version for the cross platform but all the good stuff seems to get confused over on the linux side of things
i've JUST started python but explored and installed a lot of IDEs
atom was ok - nicely customisable
pycharm - - also pretty good
doing a trial of sublime text3 at the moment and it feels like a good fit - for me
that's the caveat - it feels good for me
check out the "sublime text full stack python ide" pages on google search
install it and try it
at the moment - for development - 8/10 - but i haven't tweaked it yet and i'm pretty sure it's going to be a 99/100 fairly soon as an IDE - python or otherwise
it just has a good feel about it and that's only something that comes with
use
familiarity
experience
as i said - new to python and software development in linux - but learning - every day
oh - and st3 is the only python "IDE" i've installed lately that hasn't taken my Linux box down after installation and fixing up all the dependencies
but that's probably me just being a linux numpty
i've used visual studio on windows platform - it was the only sanctioned ms specific one for the code i was writing
it DOES have a version for the cross platform but all the good stuff seems to get confused over on the linux side of things
i've JUST started python but explored and installed a lot of IDEs
atom was ok - nicely customisable
pycharm - - also pretty good
doing a trial of sublime text3 at the moment and it feels like a good fit - for me
that's the caveat - it feels good for me
check out the "sublime text full stack python ide" pages on google search
install it and try it
at the moment - for development - 8/10 - but i haven't tweaked it yet and i'm pretty sure it's going to be a 99/100 fairly soon as an IDE - python or otherwise
it just has a good feel about it and that's only something that comes with
use
familiarity
experience
as i said - new to python and software development in linux - but learning - every day
oh - and st3 is the only python "IDE" i've installed lately that hasn't taken my Linux box down after installation and fixing up all the dependencies
but that's probably me just being a linux numpty