On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 12:19 PM, Nathan Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Thanks Ray. I like Eclipse PDT (which is associated with Zend Studio) too.
> I've also used Aptana, which is based on Eclipse, but doesn't support
> parsing PHP for some reason, and both are pretty well balanced. The thing
> I
> like about Eclipse is integrated FTP and Subversion support. I can't
> remember why we aren't looking into PDT more, but I was told to look at
> Zend
> Studio and Komodo and compare the two for features and usability. The
> things
> I know we want are:
>
> - Support to launch site locally (either via Apache or some embedded
> server, like how Visual Studio .Net uses IIS to launch an ASP.Net web
> application)
Komodo: Check
>
> - PHP 5 autocomplete/syntax highlighting support
Komodo: Check
>
> - (X)HTML, JavaScript, and CSS autocomplete/syntax highlighting
> support
Komodo: Check
>
> - Integrated Subversion source control support (Integrated FTP support
> is also nice to have but not a requirement right now)
FTP in Komodo edit
SCC in Komodo IDE
>
> - Projects support or the ability to group files into a meaningful
> collection (besides just folder on the web server root)
Komodo: Check
>
> - Ability to import the file system as we already have several pieces
> of our project complete (I know both Komodo and PDT support this
> already)
Komodo: Check
>
>
> And right now that's basically it - all of the very basics of course.
> Quick
> keys or shortcut keys for doing stuff like commenting out multiple lines
> would be nice. And it would also be nice if the editor automatically
> finished XML, HTML, PHP, and other blocks, for example, you type <html>
> and
> upon typing the '>' the editor automatically adds </html> or when you type
> '{' then '}' is automatically added to the next line. But I haven't gone
> that deep into testing yet.
>
> If either of you already knows that one of these editors has all of this
> functionality, then great let me know, and I''l look into that particular
> editor.
Plus Komodo is built on top of the Mozilla code so it supports extensions
just like Firefox does. ActiveState is doing a lot of work to get Komodo and
Firefox to basically be linked together for development.
And Komodo doesn't suffer from that java bloat that eclipse does.
-Kevin-
>
>
> Thanks.
>
> Nathan
>
> On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 11:43 AM, thebigdog <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > eclipse++
> >
> > --
> > ray
> >
>
>
>
> --
> Nathan Lane
> Home, http://www.nathandelane.com
> Blog, http://nathandelane.blogspot.com
>
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