Well? :p specifically for c++/java
I like eclipse, I tried to list as many as possible
Feel free to report this post to add a poll option or if you have the power to do so to add one!
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Well? :p specifically for c++/java
I like eclipse, I tried to list as many as possible
Feel free to report this post to add a poll option or if you have the power to do so to add one!
I tried eclipse, although due to my Java skills being ~0 I didn't get too far. Layout was slightly confusing but maybe all java IDEs are like that.
Netbeans gets my vote, purely for UI generation.
Eclipse for java and Codeblocks for c++
shame poll ain't multiple choice, voted eclipse because i'm more experienced in using eclipse although i have also coded a little c++ in eclipse.
Eclipse for Java, VS10 for C++
Eclipse for Java easily
Surprising how many people prefer eclipse over netbeans
*cough* @Brandon; *cough*
Wow.. haters gunna hate ;).. kidding.
Kasi definitely got it right on the money.
NETBEANS!! In capslock! Is way cleaner than bloated eclipse -__- InteliJ gets a vote for being useful but netbeans has a crazy clean and easy to understand UI. It's not bloated like eclipse. It's not hard to find stuff and the shortcuts are easy. InteliJ and netbeans are the only two java IDE's I have. It's all about your environment setup. I don't want one IDE to conquer them all..
For C++, definitely Codeblocks.. If it's .Net then VS2013.
For ASM, I use Nasm and Fasm assemblers.
Most of the time I code in notepad then just copy it to the IDE or command line it. It's how I remember things. So +1,000,000,000,000 for the Brandon's internal ide. I am my IDE/compiler.
Probably why it takes me longer to fix stuff. I try to find it first then trial error with the IDE's. :( It's why Kasi does all the coding and math.. I over think things lol.
http://en.wikipedia.org/asm
i know, i know, im childish.
Meh, everyone has their opinion. Brandon also compiles on microsoft paint ;)
QtCreator FTW, have not used it for anyhting outside of Qt projects though.
Currently using "notepad"+"commandline" on linux, although they're a lot different than their windows counterparts. From what I understand it is actually quite common to use gedit(notepad) while developing on linux systems, although many favor emacs/vim.
When I dabble with C++ I use Code::Blocks
I use IntelliJ for all my Java programming.
Eclipse for java
PyScripter for python
Intellij for everything.
ROOT cmd prompt, anyone? somewhat of a challenge to start with, making it all the more fun :>
vim when i am on command line.
Sublime Text 2 for everything else (was using Zend Studio before for PHP).
I use jGRASP for java....it is what my teacher uses so it makes it easier.
I wouldn't say its very good, but its the only IDE I've ever used, but I just use it to compile and check for errors.
I prefer Netbeans over Eclipse. It just looks more clean to me. The others I haven't really tried as I am just a Java beginner.