Then I think I will stick with Atom editor. After all it is very decent!.

Like the programmers of the old days, I have to get used to the terminal. 
But it is fine, since I also use Linux I am familiar with it.

P.S. I saw that Forio has made an effort with Julia Studio for people that 
want an IDE.

Τη Παρασκευή, 28 Νοεμβρίου 2014 6:04:13 π.μ. UTC-5, ο χρήστης Tony Kelman 
έγραψε:
>
> No, this doesn't exist yet as far as I know. I have no idea how plugins / 
> syntax extensions to Visual Studio work. I'm pretty sure the Python Tools 
> for Visual Studio plugin is developed by Microsoft, Julia has nowhere near 
> that level of official involvement from Microsoft that I know of.
>
> The recent announcement of Visual Studio Community Edition being freely 
> available for open-source work means this might be worth pursuing if you're 
> really interested in using Visual Studio as an IDE for Julia. Express never 
> supported plugins, but the community edition does.
>
> Tying into Visual Studio's debugger would probably be very hard. Maybe it 
> would work okay if your Julia executable is compiled with MSVC, but that 
> only barely functions right now - a few key LLVM intrinsics-related pieces 
> are broken. Should improve with future versions of LLVM.
>
>
> On Thursday, November 27, 2014 7:37:24 PM UTC-8, Pileas wrote:
>>
>> I am experimenting a bit with different text editors and IDEs.
>>
>> So far I have been quite happy with Atom editor, but there you need to 
>> always use the command line to execute the code (I have installed a 
>> `terminal` package that calls the bash quite quickly in Atom).
>>
>> I was wondering if there is a package or something for Julia that we can 
>> install so that Visual Studio recognizes the language, like the one that 
>> exists for Python. 
>>
>> I believe that this may help a lot in the debigging as well, since it 
>> will be easier to see and will save some time.
>>
>

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