[wp-hackers] Which editor do you use?

New Kind newkind at gmail.com
Tue Oct 18 08:30:39 UTC 2011


I'm jumping through Coda (my favorite one), Sublimetext 2 and PHPStorm - each of them has his advantages and weaknesses ;)

On 18 paź 2011, at 10:27, Baki Goxhaj wrote:

>> 
>> When I write PHP, I need nothing more than a basic text editor with syntax
>> highlighting and global search capabilities, alongside a web browser open
>> to
>> php.net because I can never remember whether the damn needle or haystack
>> argument comes first.
>> 
> 
> Same here. I use Bluefish on Ubuntu. That's all I use.
> 
> Kindly,
> 
> Baki Goxhaj
> www.wplancer.com | proverbhunter.com | www.banago.info<http://proverbhunter.com>
> 
> 
> On Tue, Oct 18, 2011 at 9:00 AM, Ashish Kaushik <
> ashish.kaushik at sourcefuse.com> wrote:
> 
>> If on a  linux box Debian or KDE there is beautiful editor called Geany.
>> I am using it from last 4 Years now. It comes with intellisense
>> (auto-completion) for PHP and loads of other plugins. Code highlighting
>> for many languages is inbuilt. SVN support is also there. Its nothing
>> less than a IDE
>> 
>> Light weight and superb functionality. Give it a try its available for
>> windows as well.
>> http://www.geany.org/Download/Releases
>> 
>> --
>> 
>> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> Ashish Kaushik | SourceFuse Technologies India (P) Ltd.
>> http://www.sourcefuse.com
>> 
>> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> 
>> On Tue, 2011-10-18 at 16:40 +1000, Ryan McCue wrote:
>> 
>>> Otto wrote:
>>>> When I write PHP, I need nothing more than a basic text editor with
>> syntax
>>>> highlighting and global search capabilities, alongside a web browser
>> open to
>>>> php.net because I can never remember whether the damn needle or
>> haystack
>>>> argument comes first.
>>> 
>>> +1. I do absolutely all of my work in Sublime Text, which offers limited
>>> autocompletion, which I hardly use. The only time I do use it is for
>>> needle-haystack functions, as you mentioned.
>>> 
>>> The best way to remember needle-haystack order is: array functions use
>>> needle, haystack; string functions use haystack, needle. This is true
>>> (IIRC) for all array/string functions. I usually double-check with
>>> autocompletion though.
>>> 
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