+ 30

An IDE for all

Hi! Is there an unique IDE (for pc) suitable for all languages teached in SoloLearn? I would like to have less possible IDEs in my pc, so i can save more disk space. Thanks in advance and sorry for my english ;)

2nd May 2017, 8:20 AM
Matteo Ferrantino
Matteo Ferrantino - avatar
87 Antworten
+ 75
Netbeans complete edition: https://netbeans.org/downloads/ Choose the option "All" ;) UPDATE: Visual Studio Code is the best choice. Mainly because it supports most of the popular languages today, and has many free extensions. Those extensions can help you run and even debug your codes in the editor itself!
2nd May 2017, 8:34 AM
Dev
Dev - avatar
+ 30
Some options: Netbeans, heavy Eclipse, heavy VisualStudio(windows only), heavy SublimeText (it is amazing) tons of plugins, very small but have superpowers Notepad++, small Those are "simple" text editors, but with some plugins you can do really cool things with: Gedit, small with some powers Vim, very small with superpowers Vi, very small with superpowers, actually is Vin's father Well I have a big list of IDEs and text editors what I used in 10 years of web development, but those *except VS, are the bests for my experiences. =) P.S. I am minimalist, and I like open source free solutions, so I use Gedit every day
4th May 2017, 3:09 AM
Eric Ruiz
Eric Ruiz - avatar
+ 26
Notepad++ www.notepad-plus-plus.org But you have to have the environments implemented separately.
2nd May 2017, 8:39 AM
Kuba Siekierzyński
Kuba Siekierzyński - avatar
+ 24
Tbh, first download the latest compiler.. I use MinGW from Visual Studio (but not Visual Studio itself), and compile my programs using the CMD and Notepad++. In my honest opinion... Visual Studio isn't worth it unless you're going to buy the Development Edition for $2000+/yr. Visual Studio can be really laggy and slow. If you choose not to go with Notepad++ (my fav)... then I guess go for Visual Studio CODE edition.. not community edition.. not enterprise... just VS Code... and update all directories within MinGW etc. Be sure to update the extensions as well.. since you want many languages.
2nd May 2017, 6:39 PM
Fox
Fox - avatar
+ 23
NetBeans ide
2nd May 2017, 8:33 AM
Vaibhav Sharma
Vaibhav Sharma - avatar
+ 18
@andrew grider ide stands for integrated development environment
2nd May 2017, 5:26 PM
Vaibhav Sharma
Vaibhav Sharma - avatar
+ 13
Maybe consider Visual Studio Code. As far as I know it supports almost every programming language. It is lightweight and it has IntelliSense.
3rd May 2017, 8:02 AM
Joep
Joep - avatar
+ 9
I prefer to have a different IDE for each development environment. I would suggest to take a look at the Jet Brain's suite of IDEs.
2nd May 2017, 10:00 AM
Luca
Luca - avatar
+ 9
visual studio code or atom do most of everything after adding some snippets and features with a built in function.. EDIT: ohw, notepad ++ is also very good, with some tweaking also ofcourse..
2nd May 2017, 5:01 PM
Adam Salehe
Adam Salehe - avatar
+ 9
Eclipse 🐈
8th May 2017, 3:19 PM
NimWing Yuan
NimWing Yuan - avatar
+ 7
Jip i will try netbean @dayve
3rd May 2017, 8:28 AM
Iwan
Iwan - avatar
+ 7
Atom and Sublime Text have tons of plugins and tools... they're good editors to start to code!
4th May 2017, 3:27 AM
Leandro Vieira
Leandro Vieira - avatar
+ 7
Use Atom by GitHub. It is my favorite IDE. This is because it has a plug-in for almost everything. Plugins are distributed from a convenient store integrated in Atom. It also is not over bloated with a ton of UNNECESSARY and INTRUSIVE "features", thus reducing development time and pain. However, note that after installing the IDE, you will need to install the language compiler/interpreter itself. ATOM FTW!!! 😀😃😀😃😀
4th May 2017, 4:04 AM
Varun Ramani
Varun Ramani - avatar
+ 7
I am using the below mentioned IDEs and editors vim/nano- Shell script Sublime Text- For Angular and other web related stuffs Microsoft VS Code editor- Typescript and Angular 2 (but I prefer sublime text more) Eclipse- Java related stuffs
5th May 2017, 12:27 PM
Uva Prakash P
Uva Prakash P - avatar
+ 6
Netbeans is fit for most, I code in it
3rd May 2017, 1:07 AM
handy hand
handy hand - avatar
+ 6
sublime is my favourite
4th May 2017, 7:27 AM
404 Not Found
404 Not Found - avatar
+ 6
Notepad or NetBeans
12th May 2017, 9:26 AM
Iwan
Iwan - avatar
+ 6
For me it is Netbeans at the moment. it supports many languages, is good to test the program and has a nice auto complete!
13th May 2017, 6:12 PM
Cubensis
Cubensis - avatar
+ 5
vim!!! :-). For web & java see IDEA, for c# VisualStudio 2017. And so... Vim!
3rd May 2017, 4:51 AM
Nikita Kalitin
Nikita Kalitin - avatar
+ 5
I don't know if this answer has already been said. But nowadays, IDEs are just too heavy and slow to install on your computer, and that takes away all the portability of your code. The best thing to do is to use a cloud compiler, my personal favorite is repl.it. You can either store your code on Google Drive and then import it to one of the hundreds you can find online, or for things like repl you can save it on the website.
4th May 2017, 2:30 PM
Nicholas Rutledge
Nicholas Rutledge - avatar