Whichever Jetbrains IDE is appropriate. I fell in love with Rider and wound up paying for their all-inclusive license. I've since made heavy use of Webstorm, CLion, and Datagrip professionally and personally.
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- [email protected]: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_[email protected]~
NeoVim. Endlessly customizable, quick to start, and can offer whatever niche feature youβd like. Did I say it was endlessly customizable?
Same here. I've used vim/neovim for decades now.
I hated configuring it then (in vimscript). I hate configuring it now (in lua).
When I first started programming a few years ago, I used Python's default IDLE. After a few months of that I switched to Atom (RIP), and shortly after moved to VS Code. I've stuck with VS Code since.
I strongly recommemd VSCodeium, the FOSS-ified version
Will give this a look. See how hard it is to install and use when using a screen reader. Really like that there's no telemetry
I missed Atom a lot when it was discontinued. Recently found Pulsar which is a community continuation of Atom, and it seems to be quite active.
VS Code, but may switch to VSCodium or Neovim eventually.
Emacs
GNU Emacs
JetBrains for everything
Neovim or Jetbrains depending on the project and my mood.
JetBrains IDE all the way. Mostly Intellij Idea, WebStorm, CLion (for Rust) and PhpStorm. Once in a while Visual Studio Code for a quick text file edit.
I have a JetBrains All Product Pack license, so they are always my first choice. I tried VSCode and vim, but they require so much work to get to a useable state whereas a true IDE can be used right away. I want to code and not turn fiddling with my editor into a hobby. I do use VSCode and vim, but only for editing text. And I use vim key bindings everywhere.
+1 for jetbrains, vscode feels basic compared to it
Can confirm. Your do get stuff done with that suite.
I use mainly webstorm, rider and intellij
NeoVim.
Helix π
Love helix
I just use a stack of cards and a knitting needle.
VSCodium.
Emacs with doomemacs config. Really fast and very neat for what I do.
Spacemacs here. Been using it so long (and without major problems) that I'm afraid to start experimenting with other distros, or writing my own config.
I was using spacemacs before trying doom, from what I can tell, it's an upgrade. Doom config loads faster than spacemacs on my computers. Loving both project tho.
Neovim. Nothing interesting, but it gets the job done way better than anything else I tried. I had my own config until a week ago, when I switched to nvchad because of my unwillingness to port my config to lazy.nvim plugin manager.
Vim for light work, emacs when I need more ide features. I program mostly in fortran, c , c++, and bash on remote servers.
Visual Studio and VS Code.
Recently started using neovim with LazyVim and I'm enjoying it.
Vi. Not even Vim. Just whatever vi is preinstalled on Arch Linux.
IDE's and I... don't get along.
Intellij for backend, VS Code for front end
Visual Studio professional. Itβs so slow though. Would love to use anything else, but am locked down due to work.
Intellij.
Pycharm
Notepad++ , nano if that counts lol
I use Emacs. Doom Emacs to be exact :)
I mostly code in Python and for that I use PyCharm. For everything else I use VS Code.
VSCode usually, Xcode when working with Apple platforms specifically
what, no love for CodeLite when working on smaller projects?
For Python, VS Code and Jupyter Lab. I used Sublime Text 3 previously but have found VS Code to be easier to set up and better supported over time. I do miss how fast and lightweight Sublime is this compared to VS Code though so I still use ST4 as a general text editor.
For Excel VBA (ugh), pretty much have to use the built in one as there doesnβt seem to be any alternative.
It keeps changing with the job. I've used Eclipse a whole bunch of times for Java projects, IntelliJ a couple of times. Pycharm for Python. Vim for Bash and a bunch of other stuff. QT Creator for some C++ with the QT framework. Now it's mostly VSCode.
Visual Studio
Notepad++ for non ide stuff like data files and scripts.
Occasionally Visual Studio Code. For mass text replace and some other tooling / envs.
VSCode is the best code editor around, the plugin ecosystem is phenomenal, copilot specifically has been the biggest boost to my output in 15 years of development.
Unfortunately it doesn't do everything, I got stuck with some really old legacy software and have to hop into the vb6 ide, code::blocks, and very rarely visual studio.
Multi-cursor wizardry is absolutely life changing