I'd suggest you add Dev-C++, Vim, Emacs, and MinGW (with documentation and tutorials) into that mix. All students of Computer Science in schools (and most colleges) today are forced to use an obsolete version of Turbo-C++, which doesn't even support the latest C++ standard, and throws weird exceptions even when using normal C. Then, of course, it's totally non-standards-compliant, and encourages bad habits. Plus it has next to no functionality compared to the two editors noted above.
-- धर्म एव हतो हन्ति धर्मो रक्षति रक्षितः। तस्माद् धर्मो न हन्तव्यो मा नो धर्मो हतोऽवधीत्॥
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