I'm using : Spyder [1] as matlab replacement, it's a relative young project, has a *lot* of nice feature (see its web page) like embedded matplotlib, data storage in table (with ) graph sometime i start it from the grass shell to work directly inside a "grass environment"
and as a simple and lightweight editor i use Editra [2] it can run python script, nvavigate trough class, autocompletition etc.. it is really fast when i need to open large files. while i had bad performance using Eric when i try to load large files. [1] : http://packages.python.org/spyder/ [2] : http://editra.org/ Il giorno 02/giu/2010, alle ore 17.58, Alex Mandel ha scritto: > Python - ERIC or SPE(Stani's Python Editor) > C++ - Code::Blocks looks very good (I do little C/C++ but this looks > really good) > > Eclipse was quite obnoxious and a hog for anything other than JAVA in my > experience. > > All of these are in the Ubuntu repos, though for the python editors > since they're written in python getting newer versions might be worthwhile. > > Enjoy, > Alex > > On 06/01/2010 08:21 PM, [email protected] wrote: >> Hi, I am also a fan of working in the command line. (vi is one of my friends) >> >> I use eclipse which is very powerful. Most of the time I am doing >> Java, but I also used eclipse for programming python and there is >> support for C++/C too. >> >> Java / python really makes your life easier. The only reason for >> working with C is performance for image operations, but most of them >> are already there and bindings for higher level languages are supported. >> >> I also use ubuntu 10.04, so try a >> >> apt-cache search eclipse >> >> to see what is already there. >> >> >> >> >> >> Quoting Zoltan Szecsei <[email protected]>: >> >>> Cross posted with gdal-dev and ossim-developer >>> >>> Hi Everyone, >>> Please indulge me in this slightly off topic question. >>> As I have spent the last many years of my GIS life programming in a >>> (linux BASH-like) scripting language, I am somewhat out of date with >>> Linux development environments. >>> I last programmed many years back, in C using Visual Studio 95 and >>> "flat C" on Linux command line - no fancy "make" or anything. >>> >>> I want to migrate my Linux based GIS workflows onto OpenSource >>> projects, using a mix of gdal/proj4/ossim and maybe GRASS - as the need >>> and mood grabs me. >>> >>> I have just loaded Ubuntu 10.04 64 bit as my platform, and ask if >>> anyone is willing to let me know what development environments they >>> program in. >>> >>> I'm looking to write graphical (over orthos/satelite images) digitising >>> routines, ie: display/edit/capture vectors on/in image windows, catch >>> mouse, keyboard and maybe joystick events. Maybe even stereo (3D) >>> capture too. >>> I am not a fan of GUI data capture, so whilst this looks much like >>> reinventing the wheel, I don't think it is, and hence I am unlikely to >>> see the benefit of "tacking onto" projects like QGIS etc. >>> >>> I'd be grateful to know what you guys use for programming. (I'll >>> probably stick with C as I have no experience with Java, Python or >>> other languages). >>> >>> Thanks in advance, >>> Zoltan >>> >> > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > www.ossim.org > Ossim-developer mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ossim-developer _______________________________________________ gdal-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/gdal-dev
