I hate to be that guy but vscode is there, the sheer number of extensions
makes it whatever you want, and as a js and swift developer it works well
to integrate everything together
On Sat, Nov 26, 2022, 20:47 Roy Smith <roy(a)panix.com> wrote:
I never thought I'd ever write this, but after
close to 40 years of using
emacs for everything, I'm thinking of switching to a real IDE for python
development. My latest evolution is emacs with elpy, which is pretty
powerful as these things go, but I seem to spend more time configuring
emacs and less time writing code than I want to. I got clarity on this the
other day when I was comparing the toolforge bastion hosts, the cloud VPS
images, and the kubernetes back ends to see which versions of emacs each
one had and realized this really was the tail wagging the dog.
I'm kind of in "big paradigm shift" mode right now. Moving from Django to
Flask. From mwclient to pywikibot. From unittest to pytest. I guess
since I'm reinventing the universe, I might as well look at editors too.
Other than the basic syntax coloring and auto-completion, I'm looking for
good integrations with running unit tests and with git. I also need
support for web technologies like HTML, jinja templates, and javascript in
the same tool.
I've heard good things about Sublime, but never used it. I'm not averse
to purchasing a license if it's worth it.
I've used Eclipse in the past for Java, and was pretty happy with that.
I gather that Eclipse + PyDev is pretty neat but never tried it.
I know a lot of people live in Jupyter, but that's not really my style.
What else should I be looking at? What are folks out there using?
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