Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 13th Dec 2010 19:27 UTC, submitted by lemur2
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Yeah.
However, I just... use Emacs.
Eclipse is gigantic and anything it has that Emacs lacks seems to be something I would never want.
Most people who speak of an IDE wouldn't include Emacs or VIM + *insert extension(s)* in the class of "IDE".
They usually mean "Approachable GUI IDE".
_That's_ what I'm talking about; that when people ask for a good IDE, all I can suggest is Emacs, as I know nothing about the alternatives, because I've never wanted to use one since learning Emacs.
Most people who speak of an IDE wouldn't include Emacs or VIM + *insert extension(s)* in the class of "IDE".
They usually mean "Approachable GUI IDE".
They usually mean "Approachable GUI IDE".
Pretty sure "approachable GUI IDE" is an oxymoron... I've used a few IDEs over the years, and those capable enough to be worth using tend to have a huge learning curve. Excellent for a developer willing to take time to learn his tools, but very tricky to start with - particularly if coming from the "vi + terminal" school of development.




Member since:
2008-08-19
I don't know anything about them, other than I... don't get it. Emacs user...
As an Emacs user, you should understand perfectly why someone would want an IDE - it practically *is* one.
As an Eclipse user, I almost never use the mouse, relying almost exclusively (and instinctively) on a huge number of shortcut keys for every conceivable operation. A single application for writing, compiling, running, debugging code? Tools for working with code - renaming, extracting functions, warning of possible errors? Plugins for everything else you could ever want?
Does that not sound at all like Emacs to you?