I'm another (C O G).

Emacs + gdb + gdb-mode == the best source-level debugging combo.  TotalView
is ok, for a gui, pointy-clicky distributed debugging experience, but  I
prefer emacs + gdb for serial debugging.

--Doug

On Sat, Mar 13, 2010 at 11:49 AM, Owen Densmore <[email protected]> wrote:

> With diversity, strength.
>
> I had an interesting conversation with Robert Holmes about his use of Vi (I
> think he uses the newer Vim variant).  He's incorporated it into his work
> flow in a fairly complete way .. and this is its strength: edit, compile,
> look at the file system, jump back and have an install into SVN or whatever.
>
> The simplicity of a highly component-ized set of tools is unquestionably
> powerful.
>
> I still claim Bash and the unix commands are the most "object oriented"
> suite I've used.  And it just gets better.  Now all the imaging tools you
> could want (ImageMagik), ditto audio/vidio (ffmpeg), math, graphing
> (gnuplot) .. its pretty easy to build systems that just can't be a simple
> integrated gui system.
>
> A while back I started looking into what language I used most on a year's
> worth of work.  Although Java was pretty high on the list, Bash shell
> scripts was on top.
>
> Crusty old unix guy,
>    -- Owen
>
>
>
> On Mar 13, 2010, at 12:44 AM, Jochen Fromm wrote:
>
>  Large IDEs like VisualStudio, Eclipse or NetBeans are
>> sometimes a bit slow. This is not surprising, since they
>> are often written in Java. But they offer powerful
>> functions for compiling and debugging, and they have
>> syntax highlighting, code completion and support
>> version control systems like SVN. I can not debug a
>> program with Notepad, Emacs, VI or JEdit. Who
>> wants to use VI anyway?
>>
>> -J.
>>
>
>
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>



-- 
Doug Roberts
[email protected]
[email protected]
505-455-7333 - Office
505-670-8195 - Cell
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