Ramsey Nasser a écrit : > On Dec 17, 2007 9:17 PM, PatrickMinnesota <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Yep, I'm new to the language, it's been a couple of months. >> >> I opted for gvim and console window for developing on a Windows XP >> box. I'm not a huge fan of IDEs except for when I need some >> debugging. I've done my googling and see a bunch of options out there >> for a debugging solution for Python on Windows. >> >> I've used Eclipse for a few years for Java development and I >> understand there is a Python module for it that might make sense. >> >> What I'm looking for is advice on what to use to debug general Python >> programs at the source level, some will be graphical. If the eclipse >> route is the way to go, that's fine, but I'm wondering what other >> options people have good luck with. Keep in mind I will probably >> continue to use Vi/Emacs and a console window for my main development. >> >> Thanks. >> -- >> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >> > > Debugging Python in eclipse is great.
Specially thru ssh on an overloaded web server... > It's the same as debugging in > Java, so you don't have to learn any new interface or concepts to get > started. There's some differences here. I don't even dream of trying to write any non-trivial Java progarm without a debugger. OTHO, I already wrote a few non-trivial Python programs (and some others that would have been non-trivial in Java) without having to use pdb - a couple trace and the interactive shell where quite enough. So perhaps there's at least one new concept to learn here : you don't need a mammoth IDE to be productive with an agile language. My 2 cents. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list