Hello everyone,

Personally I use Idle because, for debugging, I love being able to execute
a program in a shell and still be in that shell after the program exits, in
order to examine the variables. I realize that's not a very sophisticated
form of debugging, but it works for me.

I haven't looked around much, but has anyone found a way to do that in IDEs
like VS Code?

Mark

Le dim. 23 déc. 2018 à 18:10, Go Peppy <peppy.pla...@gmail.com> a écrit :

> If you are talking about writing simple scripts in Python then any text
> editor will work even 'nano'.
> If you are talking about writing more complicated programs in Python then
> you need IDE as you will need debugging functionality.
>
> I personally use Eclipse with PyDev plug-in on Windows machine. As Python
> is cross-platform language you can develop
> your program on one platform and deploy on another. PyDev also allows
> remote debugging. For example you can start
> your Python program on Raspberry Pi (Linux) and debug it in Eclipse/PyDev
> on Windows.
>
> Good luck.
>
>
> On Sat, Dec 22, 2018 at 1:08 PM tom arnall <kloro2...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> after using many editors for programming over many years, I finally
>> settled on VIM.
>>
>> On 12/22/18, Daniel Foerster <pydsig...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> > He was asking for good editors. I'm currently partial to VS Code; to
>> your
>> > point, it has nice integrations with git, pylint, and pytest.
>> >
>> > On Sat, Dec 22, 2018, 14:08 tom arnall <kloro2...@gmail.com wrote:
>> >
>> >> why not just use Test Driven Development and a good editor?
>> >>
>> >> On 12/22/18, David <dvp1...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> >> > Just wondering which IDE people use...
>> >> > I know some love ATOM editor (which isn't an ide, but still...)
>> >> > some love Pycharm but I've heard complaints too
>> >> > Eclipse is too much of a monster....
>> >> > I guess I should break it down to things like
>> >> > Paid or Open Source?
>> >> > Programmers Text Editor or IDE?
>> >> > Python-specific IDE or one of many?
>> >> > Cross-platform is a major plus, but Linux only is fine -win/mac only
>> is
>> >> NOT
>> >> > Should teens learning to program use a safe, simple, fluffy one, or
>> >> > just
>> >> > dive into what many people use?
>> >> >
>> >> > --
>> >> > David
>> >> >
>> >> > *Running Linux since 1994*
>> >> > *IT Tech Support *
>> >> >
>> >>
>> >
>>
>

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