I like it, probably because I'm used to the Visual Studio environment. I
haven't used it for Softimage though.
On 5/29/2012 12:39 PM, Marc-Andre Belzile wrote:
Did anyone try the VS2010 python IDE ?
http://ironpython.net/tools/
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Xavier Lapointe
Sent: Tuesday, May 29, 2012 1:30 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Scripting Development with an external IDE
Sweet (: Make sure to install Package Control (the link Alan sent), they are
all in there.
2012/5/29 Guillaume
Laforge<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Thanks for the link Xavier :), I will give it a try !
On Tue, May 29, 2012 at 12:30 PM, Xavier
Lapointe<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
https://github.com/Kronuz/SublimeCodeIntel does this for you, but maybe it's
not as good as PyDev ... not sure.
But yes, the Python Debugger is a missing point. There's one I've seen in the
Package Control called SublimeXDebug https://github.com/Kindari/SublimeXdebug,
but it's probably not as good as PyDev or Komodo (i remember we could visually
inspect the Python stack).
This guy has a good amount of package that you can install to enhance the
Sublime: https://github.com/Kronuz
Cheers
2012/5/29 Guillaume
Laforge<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Did you find any good python debugger package for Sublime ? For me it is the
missing point, but maybe I didn't search correctly ?
Also the auto-completion is cool but doesn't search for imported modules and
doesn't filter methods on instantiated objects:-/
All those stuffs are standard in Eclipse/PyDev.
On Tue, May 29, 2012 at 12:06 PM, Alok
Gandhi<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Sublime has tons of autocompletion feature, for example in one stroke you
generate code for a class with all the necessary function like __init__. You
can do multiline edit with just one change. If you have a variable 'foo' in
used in multilines of your code, you can change it at one place and all the
other occurrences gets updated. There is a whole gamut of color coding with
infinite color combinations. You can define your own color coding. There are
just few of the features. I can not do much justice to it as I personally do
not use it a lot, but I always hear great things about it. May be others can
fill you on in this. But remember that sublime is only a text editor, not an
IDE.
--
Xavier
--
Xavier