IntelliJ (with IdeaVim) for Kotlin and Java programming; Rider (with IdeaVim) for C#; NeoVim for everything else.
2 0 ReplyI use Xcode for Apple stuff. I prefer vscode for logos and neovim in the terminal.
2 0 Replyatom
2 0 ReplyVisual Studio, and I'll use Community if I haven't got access to Pro.
2 0 ReplyI can’t live without vim-like keybindings, but I also like the convenience of a proper GUI for debugging and using graphical extensions.
My solution: VSCode with the VSCode-Neovim extension, which uses a real instance of neovim to edit files.
2 0 Replyneovim but prefer to debug in vscode
2 0 ReplyJetBrains IDEs for coding, SublimeText for everything else. Sometimes Sublime also for coding on smallish code bases, thanks to LSP.
1 0 ReplyVs code
1 0 ReplyIt depends, as so many things.
VSCode is really solid, and with the right extensions I think it's probably my all-round favourite. However, I do a lot of JVM-based programming, and there's really no acceptable answer apart from the IntelliJ-family there.
Whatever the IDE, good Vim-emulation is table stakes.
1 0 ReplyIt's seems I am the only one using spacemacs/doomemacs.
Also kdevelop for C++
1 0 ReplyHelix
1 0 Replyhelix
is incredible, completely replacedneovim
for me. Granted I never used many plugins outside of language servers, so it was fairly easy to not worry about a lack of features.1 0 ReplyFor anyone who doesn't know; Helix is an editor with vim like keybindings with more out of the box functionality than vim.
I am using it too and like it.
The only problem I ran into is that the search and replace function (across.multiple files isn't very good).
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I used IntelliJ for a long time, but lately I find VSCodium does everything I need and it's generally pretty snappy.
0 0 ReplyEclipse for PHP. Yeah, I do PHP 🤷🏻♂️
0 0 ReplyPHP gave my father cancer. Also, it's structure infuriates me so I've never forgiven it
0 0 ReplyI’m sorry to hear that about your father! If it’s not too much trouble, can you please explain how it happened?
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