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Re^5: Perl Developer Survey 2017 results are availableby stevieb (Canon) |
on Apr 29, 2017 at 02:22 UTC ( [id://1189142]=note: print w/replies, xml ) | Need Help?? |
I use Vim technically, but for the most part, my platform for developing Perl code has been intelliJ IDEA with the Camelcade plugin, and Devel::Camelcadedb for debugging support (and of course, the vim plugin). Due to my Open Source work, I was recently approved for intelliJ's Open Source License, which includes every single piece of software they provide, opened to the professional level. I use a few of their tools for C/C++ (CLion, which hooks directly into my Arduino hardware), C# etc. I also use their PyCharm Professional at work, so every language I code in, I have consistency across the board, on *nix and Windows. I am not advocating for the company by any means; their free PyCharm/IDEA is what I used for a couple of years for Python/Perl before I realized they had a license for Open Source devs, which is a relatively new offering they provide. Throwing this info out there for others who do a lot of open source stuff that may be interested in looking into it. If I'm on a box without a UI, just doing a quick hack or don't have access to install anything, it's vi/vim (again, both platforms), especially after fixing a quick thing after doing a pull on one of my Raspberry Pi's. When I'm on a Windows system where gVim can't be installed, it's Notepad++ if available, and at very worst, Notepad (help my soul without 4-space tabs). Proud vi/vim user for 15+ years. Tried emacs a couple of times, but you know, you're typically either vi or emacs. I *can* bounce with emacs when necessary, but not very effectively/efficiently.
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