Javascript / WebApp development IDEs
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Morning all, Disregarding VisualStudio / Netbeans / Eclipse, what other IDEs do you guys use or recommend, the types of things I'm thinking of are along the lines of IntelliJ WebStorm[^] a couple of other I have found are pretty basic and probably do not cut it nowadays. Any suggestions welcome. Cheers,
Dave Find Me On: Web|Facebook|Twitter|LinkedIn
Folding Stats: Team CodeProject
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Morning all, Disregarding VisualStudio / Netbeans / Eclipse, what other IDEs do you guys use or recommend, the types of things I'm thinking of are along the lines of IntelliJ WebStorm[^] a couple of other I have found are pretty basic and probably do not cut it nowadays. Any suggestions welcome. Cheers,
Dave Find Me On: Web|Facebook|Twitter|LinkedIn
Folding Stats: Team CodeProject
Good question. I've been using Sublime for text editing, but have actually found that Visual Studio with the latest re-sharper is very good for JS - asides from the fact you cant have a 'plain' web project - it's always going to try and compile a bunch of files. Just as a suggestion, I think a lot of people would be interested in this - why not put up an article of what you've tried so far, pros and cons and then let others add to it? Then we might get a bit of a community round-up of the best IDEs?
My Blog: www.dwmkerr.com My Charity: Children's Homes Nepal
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Morning all, Disregarding VisualStudio / Netbeans / Eclipse, what other IDEs do you guys use or recommend, the types of things I'm thinking of are along the lines of IntelliJ WebStorm[^] a couple of other I have found are pretty basic and probably do not cut it nowadays. Any suggestions welcome. Cheers,
Dave Find Me On: Web|Facebook|Twitter|LinkedIn
Folding Stats: Team CodeProject
I alternatively use Aptana Studio 3[^] along with Visual Studio 2012. It used to be an Eclipse Plugin, but they have created this stand alone Studio edition. And it works really well. Much more light weight, not a dinosaur like Eclipse. :) I use it for initial web design, where it's just HTML, CSS and Javascript. I really like the intellisense features (almost everything has auto-complete, even css classes, file/folder paths).
Remind Me This - Manage, Collaborate and Execute your Project in the Cloud
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Good question. I've been using Sublime for text editing, but have actually found that Visual Studio with the latest re-sharper is very good for JS - asides from the fact you cant have a 'plain' web project - it's always going to try and compile a bunch of files. Just as a suggestion, I think a lot of people would be interested in this - why not put up an article of what you've tried so far, pros and cons and then let others add to it? Then we might get a bit of a community round-up of the best IDEs?
My Blog: www.dwmkerr.com My Charity: Children's Homes Nepal
Dave Kerr wrote:
I've been using Sublime for text editing
It is impressive on both functionality and performance. But you need superpowers to use it. I cant remember all the shortcuts, a steep learning curve for me (or may be I am getting lazy). :)
Remind Me This - Manage, Collaborate and Execute your Project in the Cloud
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Morning all, Disregarding VisualStudio / Netbeans / Eclipse, what other IDEs do you guys use or recommend, the types of things I'm thinking of are along the lines of IntelliJ WebStorm[^] a couple of other I have found are pretty basic and probably do not cut it nowadays. Any suggestions welcome. Cheers,
Dave Find Me On: Web|Facebook|Twitter|LinkedIn
Folding Stats: Team CodeProject
I recommend Microsoft Expression Web. I use the free version, and I'm very happy with it.
The quick red ProgramFOX jumps right over the
Lazy<Dog>
. My latest article: Understand how bitwise operators work (C# and VB.NET examples) My group: C# Programmers Group -
I recommend Microsoft Expression Web. I use the free version, and I'm very happy with it.
The quick red ProgramFOX jumps right over the
Lazy<Dog>
. My latest article: Understand how bitwise operators work (C# and VB.NET examples) My group: C# Programmers Group