A different kind of interface
Ben Finney
bignose+hates-spam at benfinney.id.au
Thu Jan 22 04:36:00 EST 2009
bearophileHUGS at lycos.com writes:
> I use the Python shell daily, plus of course normal editors to edit
> python scripts. They both are very useful for different purposes.
> But the default interactive shell isn't much handy if you want to
> modify the past code to run it again, or you want to embed a bit of
> text in the code, or if you want to produce something a bit more
> clean that you can save, or just if you want to edit and debug
> 7-lines long programs.
Adding an editor to Python solves this problem only for Python. I
certainly wouldn't want to learn a new text editor just for one
language. You're not *only* programming in Python, I hope?
Many of us solve this by using a single full-featured programmer's
editor that allows invoking a program — written in any of *dozens or
hundreds* of different languages — from within the editor.
It's a solution that only requires you to learn one editor interface,
having chosen one that's well-supported on all popular platforms and
with plug-ins accumulated over many years for a smorgasbord of
different tasks. The leaders in the field, by far, are GNU Emacs
<URL:http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/emacs.html> and Vim
<URL:http://www.vim.org/>.
--
\ “Jury: A group of 12 people, who, having lied to the judge |
`\ about their health, hearing, and business engagements, have |
_o__) failed to fool him.” —Henry L. Mencken |
Ben Finney
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