I use Geany with a dark Tango theme I put together (http://www.barryvan.com.au/2009/01/geany-ide-tango-dark-colour-scheme/). It works well enough, but the symbol browser doesn't understand Moo classes. It handles object literals and function()-style objects well enough, though. The main reason I prefer it over Netbeans, Aptana, etc. is that it's incredibly light -- it loads in under a second, and has exactly the features I want. Also it's completely cross-platform (Linux, Windows, OS-X), so I can use the same IDE everywhere. :)

One day, when I've got the time, I'd like to hack at the symbol browser to make it work correctly.

On 20/01/10 23:36, Ryan Florence wrote:
What kind of features are you looking for?

I find TextMate to be customizable enough.

On Jan 20, 2010, at 8:34 AM, Roman Land wrote:

Vote +1

On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 5:31 PM, Ren Yushiro <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    I'm sure that with the help of an IDE, we'll be able to code a lot
    faster, especially in big project (mine has more than 100 classes
    already). I've searched for an IDE that help but couldn't. Aptana
    said
    it supported mootools but it didn't understand mootools' great OOP.
    I've tried Spket and gave them a lot of feature requests but it seems
    like they like Ext.JS more.

    So... Why doesn't the mootools community create one IDE that helps
    showing the world how great mootools' OOP is? I've tried to use
    Eclipse DLTK to build one but failed because my base is PHP & MySQL.
    Anyone here with great skills in Java that will help us all?? :)




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