Search for “Choose” (without the quote marks) on the following webpage to see the differences between the community and commercial versions: https://www.jetbrains.com/pycharm/features/
From the following webpage, “Microsoft Windows 7 SP1 or later” https://www.jetbrains.com/help/pycharm/installation-guide.html?_ga=2.186403823.798151923.1566294266-889030968.1566294266 Bev > On Aug 19, 2019, at 9:24 PM, jf...@ms4.hinet.net wrote: > > Nick Sarbicki於 2019年8月19日星期一 UTC+8下午5時33分27秒寫道: >> PyCharm takes you to the source code within the editor for any >> variables/functions/classes/modules if you ctrl+click on what you want to >> see. It allows you to browse the relevant bits of code quickly, as well as >> let you change them in your local environment if need be. >> >> That way you don't have to download the source separately, you can just use >> it as a normal dependency. >> >> But if you want to view the source of a project in isolation I imagine any >> common editor will suffice. Personally I'll tend to look where the source >> is hosted (GitHub, GitLab etc) instead of downloading it. But I can >> understand why some may not trust this. >> >>> On Mon, 19 Aug 2019, 10:17 , <jf...@ms4.hinet.net> wrote: >>> >>> I like to download one package's source and study it in an editor. It >>> allows me to open the whole package as a project and let me jump from a >>> reference in one file to its definition in another file back and forth. It >>> will be even better if it can handle the import modules too. (Maybe this is >>> too much:-) >>> >>> Can anyone recommend such a tool? >>> >>> --Jach >>> -- >>> https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >>> > > There is a free community version of PyCharm. Will it support the > cross-reference of viewing different files in different subdirectory? and > what Windows versions it requires? > > --Jach > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list