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General purpose Text editor or IDE

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  • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

    What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

    R Offline
    R Offline
    R Giskard Reventlov
    wrote on last edited by
    #8

    VS 2010 for pretty much everything now with the very excellent NotePad++ in reserve.

    "If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair. nils illegitimus carborundum me, me, me

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    • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

      What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

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      R Offline
      Rage
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      vim? scite ?

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      • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

        What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

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        Peter Mulholland
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:

        such as editing columns

        have you tried holding down the alt key why moving the mouse to select columns/areas or is this not what you mean?

        Pete

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        • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

          What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

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          musefan
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          99.9% VS 2010, 0.01% HexEdit (for when I need a geek rush!)

          I may or may not be responsible for my own actions

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          • P Peter Mulholland

            Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:

            such as editing columns

            have you tried holding down the alt key why moving the mouse to select columns/areas or is this not what you mean?

            Pete

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            R Offline
            Rama Krishna Vavilala
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            That's column selection. Some editors allow you to insert and append columns.

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            • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

              What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

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              Nemanja Trifunovic
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              vim, or (for smaller C# projects) VS + VsVim.

              Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:

              But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense.

              In fact, most text editors do offer Intellisense for most popular programming languages, although generally not as good as the one provided by VS. What I really like in VS is code browsing - ctags is just too easy to get confused. On another hand, I don't have VS solutions at work, so VS is useless in this regard; I only use it for debugging.

              utf8-cpp

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              • N Nemanja Trifunovic

                vim, or (for smaller C# projects) VS + VsVim.

                Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:

                But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense.

                In fact, most text editors do offer Intellisense for most popular programming languages, although generally not as good as the one provided by VS. What I really like in VS is code browsing - ctags is just too easy to get confused. On another hand, I don't have VS solutions at work, so VS is useless in this regard; I only use it for debugging.

                utf8-cpp

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                R Offline
                Rama Krishna Vavilala
                wrote on last edited by
                #14

                Nemanja Trifunovic wrote:

                I don't have VS solutions at work,

                Really? What do you use then plan msbuild or make files?

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                • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                  What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

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                  PIEBALDconsult
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  For my own code, I mostly use Edit and only use VS when I design a WinForm. At work I have to use VS, but I use Edit to write little console apps to test things. Notepad is no good for code, but I use it for XML and HTML.

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                  • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                    What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

                    D Offline
                    D Offline
                    David Crow
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #16

                    Write it on paper, then use an OCR to scan it in. That way your handwriting stays intact.

                    "One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson

                    "Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons

                    "Some people are making such thorough preparation for rainy days that they aren't enjoying today's sunshine." - William Feather

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                    • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                      Nemanja Trifunovic wrote:

                      I don't have VS solutions at work,

                      Really? What do you use then plan msbuild or make files?

                      N Offline
                      N Offline
                      Nemanja Trifunovic
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:

                      What do you use then plan msbuild or make files?

                      An in-house build system, similar to Razzle[^].

                      utf8-cpp

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                      • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                        What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

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                        B Offline
                        Bassam Abdul Baki
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        UltraEdit above all else.

                        Web - BM - RSS - Math - LinkedIn

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                        • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                          What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

                          Mike HankeyM Offline
                          Mike HankeyM Offline
                          Mike Hankey
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          I rely heavily on Intellisense as my memory get worse and my mind wanders. (Wanders what the hell I'm doing) :)

                          "Life can only be understood backwards, but it must be lived forward." Kierkegaard, Søren

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                          • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                            What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

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                            W Offline
                            wizardzz
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            VS, for text I use edit pad lite, it is the only thing I have found that can open 1.5G+ log files.

                            Craigslist Troll: litaly@comcast.net "I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson

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                            • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                              What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

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                              B Offline
                              BonshatS
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #21

                              90% VS, 8% Vim, 2% notepad. The main reason for the differences besides what I need to do, are how long I need the file open and window position.

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                              • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                                What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

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                                M Offline
                                MikoTheTerrible
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #22

                                Visual Studio, Eclipse and very occasionally Notepad++

                                "The computer industry is the only industry that is more fashion-driven than women's fashion. Maybe I'm an idiot, but I have no idea what anyone is talking about. What is it? It's complete gibberish. It's insane. When is this idiocy going to stop?" -- Oracle CEO Larry Ellison

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                                • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                                  What do you use for writing code - a general purpose text editor (vi, emacs, textpad, notepad, notepad++, slickedit, textmate etc.) or an IDE (Visual Stuido, Eclipse, Aptana, Netbeans etc)? I know some people here prefer to edit in text editors. But the single most feature which I found that a general purpose text editor lacks is Intellisense. On the other hand most text editors have better support for creating templates or snippets compared to Visual Studio. There are some other specialized things which are not possible in Visual Studio such as editing columns. I revert back to text editor when I encounter those cases. Also when I am editing some language not supported by any IDE, I fall back to text editor. In general I think I use IDE 80% of time and text editors other 20% of time. What about you? [EDIT]I am only talking about editing and writing coe not debugging, compiling and profiling.[/EDIT]

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                                  Y Offline
                                  YDaoust
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #23

                                  Visual Studio 101% of the time. For some special edits (in particular removing empty lines): MS Word !

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                                  • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                                    That's column selection. Some editors allow you to insert and append columns.

                                    G Offline
                                    G Offline
                                    Gary Wheeler
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #24

                                    That's been available in Visual Studio since at least VS2003.

                                    Software Zen: delete this;

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                                    • D David Crow

                                      Write it on paper, then use an OCR to scan it in. That way your handwriting stays intact.

                                      "One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson

                                      "Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons

                                      "Some people are making such thorough preparation for rainy days that they aren't enjoying today's sunshine." - William Feather

                                      G Offline
                                      G Offline
                                      Gary Wheeler
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #25

                                      Plus you've got the copier down the hall for easy backups.

                                      Software Zen: delete this;

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • D David Crow

                                        Write it on paper, then use an OCR to scan it in. That way your handwriting stays intact.

                                        "One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson

                                        "Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons

                                        "Some people are making such thorough preparation for rainy days that they aren't enjoying today's sunshine." - William Feather

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                                        E Offline
                                        edmurphy99
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #26

                                        I prefer to use edlin

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                                        • G Gary Wheeler

                                          That's been available in Visual Studio since at least VS2003.

                                          Software Zen: delete this;

                                          R Offline
                                          R Offline
                                          Rama Krishna Vavilala
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #27

                                          What column selection or insertion? Selection has been available since I started using Visual Studio in version 4.3. (Actually it was called devstudio then). You could select a column by pressing Ctrl + Shift + F10 and moving the arrow keys. How do you do column insertion in visual studio?

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