A Python IDE idea - looking for input
Paul Boddie
paul at boddie.net
Fri Jan 4 06:46:05 EST 2002
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Fri Jan 4 06:46:05 EST 2002
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"Brad Bollenbach" <bbollenbach at home.com> wrote in message news:<2u8Z7.24814$L4.2838063 at news2.calgary.shaw.ca>... > > There are really only two things in VB's IDE that are worth trying to > reproduce: the form designer, and the debugger. Everything else that VB does > can be handled by common sense (like "project managers"), and a decent text > editor (for a good laugh, compare vim to VB's editor). For me, tight integration with CVS would be a requirement - there would be no needless "declaring" of files in projects in my ideal IDE. > Further, a form designer is only useful for those whose problems involve > GUI's, and a debugger is only really useful to those who don't find the one > included with Python to be useful and who don't think the simplicity of the > language itself greatly reduces the need for a debugger to begin with. While debuggers are useful - very useful for programs written in C, for example - the simplistic trace statement approach works well in Python, especially if one has done a fair amount of testing on various program components before putting them together. I heard that certain IDEs for Java are now increasing their support for unit testing, and this would be nice for any ideal Python IDE. Of course, the GUI-centric nature of some IDEs is part of a much larger "turn off" for many developers: can the IDE support development in widely varying environments, such as Web or application server modules/components? Not everyone is writing graphical client software, but that is surely the emphasis of VB. I think many people approach the "what there should be in an IDE" issue from a very narrow mindset, imposed by the variety (or similarity) of existing IDEs. One only has to look at screenshots of almost any commercial or open source IDE to see the blatant similarities of them all - indeed, it's usually possible to predict what an IDE will look like before clicking on the "screenshots" link on any given Web site promoting an IDE. A more interesting IDE-like project would support new developers and scale up to being generally useful for experts. I can imagine having visual representations of Python data types with instances of those types showing their contents in a window (or frame) representing the current namespace, and such representations alone would be a powerful replacement for the archaic spreadsheet concept. Users would be able to manipulate the contents of the representations directly, or by using the Python prompt, but each manipulation would be reflected in all of the available representations, so that a change to a list element might be reflected in the "Python console" by the appearance of an assignment statement involving that list element. More advanced usage could be supported by letting users change the representations by defining different kinds of views, and this would effectively permit the development of form-based interfaces. One could also be able to determine whether the introduction of a new namespace (due to a function call, for example) would open a new window, or instead affect the contents of an existing window. The challenge in such a project would be to find a good representation for activities rather than data and for abstract data "containers" rather than concrete data items. Of course, one might suggest that textual Python source code is a good enough representation for program tasks, but it would be nice to be able to see how that code manipulates the data, or at least be able to step through running code one line at a time. And that brings us right back to debugging tools... Paul
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