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  3. What tools and services do you now consider part of your daily workflow?

What tools and services do you now consider part of your daily workflow?

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  • C Chris Maunder

    I was thinking about how my development life has changed a little in the last decade. No longer is it just Visual Studio. It's Visual Studio, and Azure DevOps, and SQL Server management studio, and pgAdmin, and Redis desktop manager, npm and webpack, Chrome and DevTools, CodeProject and SO, remote desktop, PowerShell, and all the ridiculousness around hosting, domain management and DNS. That's a lotta stuff, which I guess I could group roughly as IDEs Build tools Debug tools Data storage management Remote management tools Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support [also: Office + online Office (MS + Google)] [also: Security apps (password managers / authorisation apps)] [also: Chat / video conference apps] [also: graphic design apps] Coffee Is this normal? Anything else you guys are generally using day to day (or no longer using these days)?

    cheers Chris Maunder

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    Slacker007
    wrote on last edited by
    #8

    our shop just upgraded from writing in the dirt with sticks, to stone tablets. big win, if you ask me!! :-D - Visual Studio 2019 - SQL Server - DevOps using Git repos. Continuous integration with DevOps as well as sprint planning, etc. - Visual Code - LinqPad 5 - Learning AWS

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    • C Chris Maunder

      I was thinking about how my development life has changed a little in the last decade. No longer is it just Visual Studio. It's Visual Studio, and Azure DevOps, and SQL Server management studio, and pgAdmin, and Redis desktop manager, npm and webpack, Chrome and DevTools, CodeProject and SO, remote desktop, PowerShell, and all the ridiculousness around hosting, domain management and DNS. That's a lotta stuff, which I guess I could group roughly as IDEs Build tools Debug tools Data storage management Remote management tools Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support [also: Office + online Office (MS + Google)] [also: Security apps (password managers / authorisation apps)] [also: Chat / video conference apps] [also: graphic design apps] Coffee Is this normal? Anything else you guys are generally using day to day (or no longer using these days)?

      cheers Chris Maunder

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      Arthur V Ratz
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      I would group all of those, mentioned above, by: Development Machine (Offline): IDEs Build and debug tools Remote management tools Data Center or Cloud (Online): Data storage management Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support Miscellaneous: Coffee :)

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      • C Chris Maunder

        I was thinking about how my development life has changed a little in the last decade. No longer is it just Visual Studio. It's Visual Studio, and Azure DevOps, and SQL Server management studio, and pgAdmin, and Redis desktop manager, npm and webpack, Chrome and DevTools, CodeProject and SO, remote desktop, PowerShell, and all the ridiculousness around hosting, domain management and DNS. That's a lotta stuff, which I guess I could group roughly as IDEs Build tools Debug tools Data storage management Remote management tools Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support [also: Office + online Office (MS + Google)] [also: Security apps (password managers / authorisation apps)] [also: Chat / video conference apps] [also: graphic design apps] Coffee Is this normal? Anything else you guys are generally using day to day (or no longer using these days)?

        cheers Chris Maunder

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        Gary R Wheeler
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        These are all tools I use daily: 1. Coffee (makes me decide to live another day) 2. Coffee (ensures I let the rest of you live another day) 3. Remote Desktop (working from home) 4. Visual Studio 5. Trace Viewer (an in-house debugging tool) 6. Visual SourceSafe (don't; just don't) 7. Coffee (renews #1 and #2) 8. Chrome, Google, www.codeproject.com :cool: and www.stackoverflow.com :~ 9. Notepad 10. Paint.net 11. Builder (in-house automated build tool) These are as needed: 12. WinMerge 13. SysInternals suite

        Software Zen: delete this;

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        • G Gary R Wheeler

          These are all tools I use daily: 1. Coffee (makes me decide to live another day) 2. Coffee (ensures I let the rest of you live another day) 3. Remote Desktop (working from home) 4. Visual Studio 5. Trace Viewer (an in-house debugging tool) 6. Visual SourceSafe (don't; just don't) 7. Coffee (renews #1 and #2) 8. Chrome, Google, www.codeproject.com :cool: and www.stackoverflow.com :~ 9. Notepad 10. Paint.net 11. Builder (in-house automated build tool) These are as needed: 12. WinMerge 13. SysInternals suite

          Software Zen: delete this;

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          Maximilien
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          6. Visual SourceSafe (don't; just don't)

          I will : my condolences. :rose: :rolleyes:

          I'd rather be phishing!

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          • C Chris Maunder

            I was thinking about how my development life has changed a little in the last decade. No longer is it just Visual Studio. It's Visual Studio, and Azure DevOps, and SQL Server management studio, and pgAdmin, and Redis desktop manager, npm and webpack, Chrome and DevTools, CodeProject and SO, remote desktop, PowerShell, and all the ridiculousness around hosting, domain management and DNS. That's a lotta stuff, which I guess I could group roughly as IDEs Build tools Debug tools Data storage management Remote management tools Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support [also: Office + online Office (MS + Google)] [also: Security apps (password managers / authorisation apps)] [also: Chat / video conference apps] [also: graphic design apps] Coffee Is this normal? Anything else you guys are generally using day to day (or no longer using these days)?

            cheers Chris Maunder

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            DerekT P
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            I've chosen to keep it simple wherever possible. A typical dev day would involve * Visual Studio * Chrome + Dev.Tools * Heidi SQL (interfacing to either MySql or MS Sql Server) * Notepad * Paint * Thunderbird (email client) .. and that's about it.

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            • M Maximilien

              6. Visual SourceSafe (don't; just don't)

              I will : my condolences. :rose: :rolleyes:

              I'd rather be phishing!

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              Slacker007
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              Maximilien wrote:

              Visual SourceSafe

              Is that still a thing? :rolleyes:

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              • S Slacker007

                Maximilien wrote:

                Visual SourceSafe

                Is that still a thing? :rolleyes:

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                Gary R Wheeler
                wrote on last edited by
                #14

                In our defense we have a set of best practices which are aggressively enforced, automated backups, and smart people using it. We are a small group that started with over a dozen people years ago and are now down to five after some financial misadventures by the company. Our workload is heavy enough and SourceSafe is such an ingrained part of our toolchain that we've never been able to switch.

                Software Zen: delete this;

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                • G Gary R Wheeler

                  These are all tools I use daily: 1. Coffee (makes me decide to live another day) 2. Coffee (ensures I let the rest of you live another day) 3. Remote Desktop (working from home) 4. Visual Studio 5. Trace Viewer (an in-house debugging tool) 6. Visual SourceSafe (don't; just don't) 7. Coffee (renews #1 and #2) 8. Chrome, Google, www.codeproject.com :cool: and www.stackoverflow.com :~ 9. Notepad 10. Paint.net 11. Builder (in-house automated build tool) These are as needed: 12. WinMerge 13. SysInternals suite

                  Software Zen: delete this;

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                  yacCarsten
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  Up until about 2 years ago we were using VSS as well, then (what was meant to be a temporary step) we moved to SourceGear. This is very similar to VSS so really no learning curve. They have VSS to Source migration tool (probably a day's downtime with about a weeks prep). It was very easy/relatively painless process. The repository resides in SQL, Visual Studio integration, GUI tool or Browser. It does have its funnies, but nothing serious (that I've come across). It does have a migration to GIT as well (for later). BTW, not associated with SourceGear, just a user.

                  // TODO: Insert something here

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                  • C Chris Maunder

                    I was thinking about how my development life has changed a little in the last decade. No longer is it just Visual Studio. It's Visual Studio, and Azure DevOps, and SQL Server management studio, and pgAdmin, and Redis desktop manager, npm and webpack, Chrome and DevTools, CodeProject and SO, remote desktop, PowerShell, and all the ridiculousness around hosting, domain management and DNS. That's a lotta stuff, which I guess I could group roughly as IDEs Build tools Debug tools Data storage management Remote management tools Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support [also: Office + online Office (MS + Google)] [also: Security apps (password managers / authorisation apps)] [also: Chat / video conference apps] [also: graphic design apps] Coffee Is this normal? Anything else you guys are generally using day to day (or no longer using these days)?

                    cheers Chris Maunder

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                    Chris Losinger
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #16

                    mostly: RDP VSCode (go, typescript, React, Redux) gitBash yarn git protobuf chrome gerrit jenkins Teams Outlook Jira Confluence

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                    • Y yacCarsten

                      Up until about 2 years ago we were using VSS as well, then (what was meant to be a temporary step) we moved to SourceGear. This is very similar to VSS so really no learning curve. They have VSS to Source migration tool (probably a day's downtime with about a weeks prep). It was very easy/relatively painless process. The repository resides in SQL, Visual Studio integration, GUI tool or Browser. It does have its funnies, but nothing serious (that I've come across). It does have a migration to GIT as well (for later). BTW, not associated with SourceGear, just a user.

                      // TODO: Insert something here

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                      Gary R Wheeler
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      Back in 2015 we had a lull in the workflow, so I took a serious look at modernizing our toolchain. I considered SourceGear, but opted for git. Unfortunately our situation went to hell in a handbasket as we were talking about the change, so that all fell by the wayside.

                      Software Zen: delete this;

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                      • C Chris Maunder

                        I was thinking about how my development life has changed a little in the last decade. No longer is it just Visual Studio. It's Visual Studio, and Azure DevOps, and SQL Server management studio, and pgAdmin, and Redis desktop manager, npm and webpack, Chrome and DevTools, CodeProject and SO, remote desktop, PowerShell, and all the ridiculousness around hosting, domain management and DNS. That's a lotta stuff, which I guess I could group roughly as IDEs Build tools Debug tools Data storage management Remote management tools Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support [also: Office + online Office (MS + Google)] [also: Security apps (password managers / authorisation apps)] [also: Chat / video conference apps] [also: graphic design apps] Coffee Is this normal? Anything else you guys are generally using day to day (or no longer using these days)?

                        cheers Chris Maunder

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                        Lost User
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        Visual Studio 2019 Notepad Excel MS Snipping Tool Character map Outlook Edge Firefox Visio MS Paint Paint.Net MS Expression Encoder 4 Screen Capture Foxit Reader Z-zip Calculator Age of Empires II reboot

                        It was only in wine that he laid down no limit for himself, but he did not allow himself to be confused by it. ― Confucian Analects: Rules of Confucius about his food

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                        • C Chris Maunder

                          I was thinking about how my development life has changed a little in the last decade. No longer is it just Visual Studio. It's Visual Studio, and Azure DevOps, and SQL Server management studio, and pgAdmin, and Redis desktop manager, npm and webpack, Chrome and DevTools, CodeProject and SO, remote desktop, PowerShell, and all the ridiculousness around hosting, domain management and DNS. That's a lotta stuff, which I guess I could group roughly as IDEs Build tools Debug tools Data storage management Remote management tools Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support [also: Office + online Office (MS + Google)] [also: Security apps (password managers / authorisation apps)] [also: Chat / video conference apps] [also: graphic design apps] Coffee Is this normal? Anything else you guys are generally using day to day (or no longer using these days)?

                          cheers Chris Maunder

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                          Rage
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          A hammer, only to cite to most useful in meeting.

                          Do not escape reality : improve reality !

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                          • C Chris Maunder

                            I was thinking about how my development life has changed a little in the last decade. No longer is it just Visual Studio. It's Visual Studio, and Azure DevOps, and SQL Server management studio, and pgAdmin, and Redis desktop manager, npm and webpack, Chrome and DevTools, CodeProject and SO, remote desktop, PowerShell, and all the ridiculousness around hosting, domain management and DNS. That's a lotta stuff, which I guess I could group roughly as IDEs Build tools Debug tools Data storage management Remote management tools Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support [also: Office + online Office (MS + Google)] [also: Security apps (password managers / authorisation apps)] [also: Chat / video conference apps] [also: graphic design apps] Coffee Is this normal? Anything else you guys are generally using day to day (or no longer using these days)?

                            cheers Chris Maunder

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                            Jacquers
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            I have to add some more to my list: Time Tracking: Clockify & Jira Collaboration: Jira & Confluence Database: pgAdmin Also Excel as a general utility.

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                            • C Chris Maunder

                              I was thinking about how my development life has changed a little in the last decade. No longer is it just Visual Studio. It's Visual Studio, and Azure DevOps, and SQL Server management studio, and pgAdmin, and Redis desktop manager, npm and webpack, Chrome and DevTools, CodeProject and SO, remote desktop, PowerShell, and all the ridiculousness around hosting, domain management and DNS. That's a lotta stuff, which I guess I could group roughly as IDEs Build tools Debug tools Data storage management Remote management tools Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support [also: Office + online Office (MS + Google)] [also: Security apps (password managers / authorisation apps)] [also: Chat / video conference apps] [also: graphic design apps] Coffee Is this normal? Anything else you guys are generally using day to day (or no longer using these days)?

                              cheers Chris Maunder

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                              Jacquers
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #21

                              Good old pen and paper for working out ideas and prototyping :)

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                              • C Chris Maunder

                                I was thinking about how my development life has changed a little in the last decade. No longer is it just Visual Studio. It's Visual Studio, and Azure DevOps, and SQL Server management studio, and pgAdmin, and Redis desktop manager, npm and webpack, Chrome and DevTools, CodeProject and SO, remote desktop, PowerShell, and all the ridiculousness around hosting, domain management and DNS. That's a lotta stuff, which I guess I could group roughly as IDEs Build tools Debug tools Data storage management Remote management tools Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support [also: Office + online Office (MS + Google)] [also: Security apps (password managers / authorisation apps)] [also: Chat / video conference apps] [also: graphic design apps] Coffee Is this normal? Anything else you guys are generally using day to day (or no longer using these days)?

                                cheers Chris Maunder

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                                Stuart Dootson
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #22

                                I do desktop app development - my daily workflow revolves around: * Visual Studio Code - editor & I use the integrated terminal to get stuff done. I prefer to Visual Studio - it's a personal preference thing. * WSL with an Ubuntu 18.04 distro - I use Linux for a) bash (don't like CMD & Powershell so much), b) building and testing and debugging on Linux * Visual Studio C++ tools - I needs MSVC * g++ - primary Linux build toolchain * clang - provides C/C++ formatting (clang-format) and static analysis (clang-tidy & clang static analyser) * CMake - build generator * Ninja - build tool * gdb - Linux debug through VSCode * git, GitKraken - command-line git mostly, but I like GitKraken for preparing commits when I've been bad & done multiple commits worth of work without actually committing... * fd, rg and various other Linux tools - `fd` is a `find` replacement, `rg` is a `grep` replacement. They work so much faster than `find` and `grep` and ignore files in your `.gitignore` - perfect for codebase searches. * 1Password - my favourite password manager * [Pandoc](https://pandoc.org/), LaTeX - I prepare my documentation in Markdown & publish to HTML & PDF with [Pandoc](https://pandoc.org/) & LaTeX. It all uses pre-prepared workflows & is fully automated - Markdown in, nice looking HTML and PDF out!

                                Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p

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                                • C Chris Maunder

                                  I was thinking about how my development life has changed a little in the last decade. No longer is it just Visual Studio. It's Visual Studio, and Azure DevOps, and SQL Server management studio, and pgAdmin, and Redis desktop manager, npm and webpack, Chrome and DevTools, CodeProject and SO, remote desktop, PowerShell, and all the ridiculousness around hosting, domain management and DNS. That's a lotta stuff, which I guess I could group roughly as IDEs Build tools Debug tools Data storage management Remote management tools Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support [also: Office + online Office (MS + Google)] [also: Security apps (password managers / authorisation apps)] [also: Chat / video conference apps] [also: graphic design apps] Coffee Is this normal? Anything else you guys are generally using day to day (or no longer using these days)?

                                  cheers Chris Maunder

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                                  ZevSpitz
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #23

                                  Anyone else using LINQPad?

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                                  • Z ZevSpitz

                                    Anyone else using LINQPad?

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                                    rnbergren
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #24

                                    not unless you absolutely have to

                                    To err is human to really mess up you need a computer

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                                    • C Chris Maunder

                                      I was thinking about how my development life has changed a little in the last decade. No longer is it just Visual Studio. It's Visual Studio, and Azure DevOps, and SQL Server management studio, and pgAdmin, and Redis desktop manager, npm and webpack, Chrome and DevTools, CodeProject and SO, remote desktop, PowerShell, and all the ridiculousness around hosting, domain management and DNS. That's a lotta stuff, which I guess I could group roughly as IDEs Build tools Debug tools Data storage management Remote management tools Source code control Library management systems Hosting services and tools (including backups) Community support [also: Office + online Office (MS + Google)] [also: Security apps (password managers / authorisation apps)] [also: Chat / video conference apps] [also: graphic design apps] Coffee Is this normal? Anything else you guys are generally using day to day (or no longer using these days)?

                                      cheers Chris Maunder

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                                      rnbergren
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #25

                                      looking thru most of the answers. I would add. Besides Powershell, VSCode, VS2019, SSMS. MS OneNote - OneNote is the bomb www.systeminternals.com - Sys Int is just needed Agent Ransack - Search utility Color pic http://www.iconico.com/colorpic/   GIMP or Paint.net or photochop - Again take your pic. All do the job. I use Gimp Gsplit for sending large files to someone notepad++

                                      To err is human to really mess up you need a computer

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                                      • G Gary R Wheeler

                                        These are all tools I use daily: 1. Coffee (makes me decide to live another day) 2. Coffee (ensures I let the rest of you live another day) 3. Remote Desktop (working from home) 4. Visual Studio 5. Trace Viewer (an in-house debugging tool) 6. Visual SourceSafe (don't; just don't) 7. Coffee (renews #1 and #2) 8. Chrome, Google, www.codeproject.com :cool: and www.stackoverflow.com :~ 9. Notepad 10. Paint.net 11. Builder (in-house automated build tool) These are as needed: 12. WinMerge 13. SysInternals suite

                                        Software Zen: delete this;

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                                        Matt Bond
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #26

                                        We have VSS and TFS. Management/Corp IT is making us move to 100% TFS, but most of us like VSS better. Bond Keep all things as simple as possible, but no simpler. -said someone, somewhere

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                                        • M Matt Bond

                                          We have VSS and TFS. Management/Corp IT is making us move to 100% TFS, but most of us like VSS better. Bond Keep all things as simple as possible, but no simpler. -said someone, somewhere

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                                          Gary R Wheeler
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #27

                                          I looked at TFS. Even for a small group like ours, it would have required someone maintaining it full time. While git is not terribly intuitive, at least the maintenance is simple.

                                          Software Zen: delete this;

                                          S 1 Reply Last reply
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