Great thread :D

I am a self-taught coding enthusiast, and my "carreer" started with matlab 
data processing scripts at university in the late 2000's. Hence, today I 
deal mostly with python.
My preferred IDE is Pycharm/ IntelliJ, enhanced by jupyter for 
experimenting & data stuff.
For beancount specifically i use VSCode, due to its integration with both 
the beacount plugin and WSL. 
If these were available for Pycharm, I'd drop VSCode.





On Thursday, 15 April 2021 at 00:55:14 UTC+2 vive...@gmail.com wrote:

> Just slowly coming back to this space, I'm not an everyday software 
> developer but sublimetext (feels faster than vscode), bash, and a web 
> browser have sufficed. Sometimes I've used 'pudb' to debug things instead 
> of pdb since it feels easier. Keeping a cheatsheet file to know what 
> terminal commands to use for beancount has helped.
>
> Ideally for using beancount I'd love to do everything within a `fava` app 
> of sorts so someone who isn't a developer can approach doing updates & 
> viewing reports, but know there's been limitations towards getting there.
>
> On Tuesday, April 13, 2021 at 2:06:27 PM UTC-5 tomasz.z...@gmail.com 
> wrote:
>
>> I am also zsh, tmux and vim user :)
>>
>> On Tuesday, April 13, 2021 at 5:48:16 PM UTC+2 Alan H wrote:
>>
>>> <delurk>
>>> I'm basically a mix of the above: emacs (since quite literally the 80s), 
>>> zsh, fzf, tmux and a web browser. I've got emacs configured nicely on my 
>>> Mac, but my developer productivity wouldn't change at all if I was over ssh 
>>> to a linux box (thanks tmux). I developed my development habits and 
>>> workflows on VT102s attached to a vax a LONG time ago. I haven't really 
>>> changed THAT much since those days except some of the support tools have 
>>> changed (like git). I'll +1 tig - it is outstanding. I also use sourcetree 
>>> from time to time (but almost exclusively as a visual aid - and in many 
>>> cases, tig works as well or better).  I happen to carry a Mac around, but 
>>> it is mostly just for the ancillary bits (Music, etc).
>>>
>>> Alan
>>> <delurk/>
>>> On Tuesday, April 13, 2021 at 11:58:51 AM UTC+1 redst...@gmail.com 
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Tmux, zsh, and vim.
>>>>
>>>> All configured and armed to the teeth with plugins for efficiency, 
>>>> including these highlights:
>>>> - vim: ultisnips, fzf, ripgrep, ranger, and of course, vim-beancount 
>>>> (plus a ton of others)
>>>> - zsh: tig (best curses based git interface i've come across), fzf
>>>>
>>>> On Monday, April 12, 2021 at 5:04:13 AM UTC-7 kuba....@gmail.com wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Hi all,
>>>>>
>>>>> As we all know, the right tools can make for a great development 
>>>>> environment while the wrong tools can make for hard work.
>>>>>
>>>>> And I'm always interested to know what people are using, and why, in 
>>>>> case I can learn something new.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'll start in the hope others will join in.
>>>>>
>>>>> For Python, I'm using PyCharm 2021.1. I find the idea very 
>>>>> powerful and I have been very happy with the JetBrians suite of IDEs ever 
>>>>> since I changed over from Eclipse when I was doing Java development. I 
>>>>> like 
>>>>> how they adapt the IDE for common Git workflows and add features to make 
>>>>> development easier (like handling of virtual environments). It also has 
>>>>> very powerful refactoring tools making code changes a breeze.
>>>>>
>>>>> For C/C++, I would choose to use CLion, again from JetBrains. I don't 
>>>>> do much C development so I can't offer much more than that. I did start 
>>>>> learning VIM awhile back but I have not actually done any development 
>>>>> with 
>>>>> it yet.
>>>>>
>>>>> Kind regards,
>>>>> Jakub.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>

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