They were kind enough to offer me a professional license for open
source projects dev. I even't yet configured it for web2py but I know
Wing very well and I love it. I use to work with a very advanced
configuration on Emacs and Eclipse with pydev and pydev extensions.
For a time, I used Komodo (and it's good... but the best version is
not free) but Wing for Python is very likely the winner. The only
thing I don't like so much about it, it's its non native interface for
Mac OS. It's the problem of GTK and of the reasons why I prefer Qt.

Anyway, I'm real Emacs fan and I love Eclipse. It's not easy for me
but It's true...
Wing is the best for python.

On Apr 23, 4:49 pm, Wes James <compte...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 11:51 PM, Speedbird <ju...@techfuel.net> wrote:
>
> > Folks,
>
> > Just wanted to share with the community a real jewel, many of you knew
> > this but I actually started using it "heavily" during the past couple
> > of weeks: the IDE is wing from wingware, basically you run web2py from
>
> <snip>
>
>
>
> > Wing IDE is not free, BUT you can get a developer's license (which
>
> There is a free version of wingide:
>
> http://www.wingware.com/wingide-101/index
>
> > will give you the latest "Pro" release bona-fide). you have no idea
> > how much less time I've spent debugging the code with a tool like this
> > one, long live web2py
>
> <snip>
>
> -wj
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