Commercial IDEs: is it worth it?
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jarrodhroberson at yahoo.com
Thu Jan 23 22:56:44 EST 2003
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Thu Jan 23 22:56:44 EST 2003
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Doug Glenn <dglenn at charter.net> wrote in message news:<mailman.1043278720.24130.python-list at python.org>... > On Wednesday 22 January 2003 06:08, Thomas Weholt wrote: > > Opinions on what, where and why to pay for a Python-friendly IDE > > would be appreciated. > > I use Komodo (personal edition 49$), Wingide (Standard, 149$) and > BlackAdder Personal Edition (beta, 49$). > > Call me stupid for it if you want. :) > > Komodo for its project management and license for both Windows and > Linux. version for the same price. (I think . I use it on the same > computer). > > Wingide for the excellant source code brower and the source management > tools. I prefer the look and feel of Komodo, but Wingide has far more > features. > > BlackAdder for the PyQT integration. Although I could have used the open > source items to build the GUIs with the free QTDesigner, the > documentation for PyQT on it was better than anything I found on the > web regarding PyQT even though it is not finished. > > Personally as a newbie to Python, I am looking for all the help I can > get without resorting to showing my abject ignorance in the list :). > > On a personal note... > One other reason to purchase.. they wrote it for Linux and I want to > support their efforts. I even buy autoupdates for my distro so they > stay in business rather than downloading it. There is no such thing as > a free lunch. I try to make sure put my money where my mouth is <smile> > > ----- > Doug I have to say I have been quite pleased with WingIDE, it is not the prettiest thing in the world, but it is functional and definately faster than working with out it. I am a long time SlickEdit fan, if you do multi-language development it is by far the most cost effective solution I have ever seen. That said I am a new Python programmer because I needed a scripting system for some Java and C++ applications and did not want to re-invent the wheel, I did some research and selected Python.
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