I currently use homesite 5.5, but am looking for something better. Macromedia is pretty much dropping homesite, which is a shame- hs is awesome.
I currently use homesite 5.5, but am looking for something better. Macromedia is pretty much dropping homesite, which is a shame- hs is awesome.
Notepad
*PSA* Wii Redump collector's can now unscrub ISO files. So scrubbed games can now be verified. You can find the program to do this here
SecondedOriginally Posted by Ragnar
Bleh, get gVim for windows. Infinitely better. It really depends what you are coding... if it's Java, get an IDE, like Eclipse (Trust me, it's THAT good, and free).
All I can say is that my life is pretty plain
I like watchin the puddles gather rain
And all I can do is just pour some tea for two
and speak my point of view
But its not sane..
I just want some one to say to me
Ill always be there when you wake
Ya know Id like to keep my cheeks dry today
So stay with me and Ill have it made
And I dont understand why I sleep all day
And I start to complain that theres no rain
And all I can do is read a book to stay awake
And it rips my life away but its a great escape..
All I can say is that my life is pretty plain...
ALT+R is where I do my coding. Although we call it scripting. I guess you need to be a part of the snazzy ALT+R crowd.
Je veux te voir dans un film pornographique
I wonder if eclipse has come a long way since I used it two years ago. Because all I remember at the time was that it was ungodly bloated...Perhaps the fact they didn't teach us how to use it worth shit would be part of it too.Originally Posted by Paul Miller
gVim is very nice, it'll just take you some time to learn how to use it properly. It's worth the time though.
I'm always using Editplus.
JCreator 3.0 LE. Still using that.
Have you seen me before?
Notepad2 + Firefox with the Web Developer toolbar.
Long live CSS.
It has come a long way. It's still Java based and pretty bad on the resources, but it is absolutely incredible what you can do, and all the plugins are cool too.Originally Posted by Xaenn
All I can say is that my life is pretty plain
I like watchin the puddles gather rain
And all I can do is just pour some tea for two
and speak my point of view
But its not sane..
I just want some one to say to me
Ill always be there when you wake
Ya know Id like to keep my cheeks dry today
So stay with me and Ill have it made
And I dont understand why I sleep all day
And I start to complain that theres no rain
And all I can do is read a book to stay awake
And it rips my life away but its a great escape..
All I can say is that my life is pretty plain...
Hmm, just out of interest. What kind of features are we looking at? Sadly in our stupid class they never even taught us how to use it's debugging features...Originally Posted by Paul Miller
I remember it lagging the hell out of those Red Hat machines we were using. Of course it was Red Hat, so it should be of little surprise.
It runs fine on my P4 2.4GHz machine with a gig of RAM... so I can't say how far it will scale down. The jUnit testing builtin is absolutely brilliant... makes jUnit infinitely easier to work with. You can get plugins for C++ and C#, a find bugs program that detects simple bugs as you write the code, and a host of other things I've yet to or hardly explored. It's been a while since I've had to code Java (or so it feels, as it's only been a month and a half), so I'll have to get back to you on more stuff.
All I can say is that my life is pretty plain
I like watchin the puddles gather rain
And all I can do is just pour some tea for two
and speak my point of view
But its not sane..
I just want some one to say to me
Ill always be there when you wake
Ya know Id like to keep my cheeks dry today
So stay with me and Ill have it made
And I dont understand why I sleep all day
And I start to complain that theres no rain
And all I can do is read a book to stay awake
And it rips my life away but its a great escape..
All I can say is that my life is pretty plain...
Hmm, I have no real desire to code java anymore, but it is still interesting.
I use notepad2 and jEdit. JEdit, I'm more familiar with since I was using it back in my Linux days (two weeks ago), but NP2 is looking pretty good right now. I like the simple stuff. Plus, since I don't code for IE, I need a coder with an integrated gecko browser. There are none as far as I know. So I just use my own, you know?
I use a program called HandyHTML Studio 2. It's basically a suped up version of Notepad, but it keeps things color-co-ordinated and whatnot so that it's easier to spot mistakes, and you can change the colors if you don't like what they have set for you. There is also a menu-tree of different attributes and whatnot for every HTML code as well as CSS parameters, and it keeps built-in functions such as PHP's "echo" or "sort" or "explode" set to specific colors, so that you can tell if you've missed a letter or didn't enter something right or not, or if it's a recently-defined function.
Yadda yadda yadda... it's good. Costs about $30...