I like (so my students) the amazing Ninja-IDE, with explicit PEP8 and python 3 tips. Version 3 is coming. Open source, programmed in python for python.
http://ninja-ide.org/ > El 10/12/2014, a las 23:21, Vernon D. Cole <vernondc...@gmail.com> escribió: > > I second the suggestion to use PyCharm. I have been using it commercially > (and almost exclusively) for two years. The free version is very capable for > any normal desktop projects, and the professional version is free for > educational institutions or students. If has a few bad habits (mostly > inherited from the fact that it is written in Java) but the many good things > about it far outweigh them. Built-in support for hard to learn but easy to > use features like Python virtual environments and pip downloads makes it a > real winner. The integrated debugger is quite good, and it operates almost > identically in both Windows and Linux. > > Similarly, I have been using git (and GitHub) for the same two years. GitHub > is great, and almost makes up for the terrible faults in git. Nevertheless, I > would highly recommend starting students out using Bitbucket and Mercurial, > for the same reasons that you are teaching Python rather than C++. It is so > much easier to learn. They can transfer learning to Git if and when they are > forced to. Both git and hg are well supported by PyCharm. > > _______________________________________________ > Edu-sig mailing list > Edu-sig@python.org > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/edu-sig
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