Ide vs ide
Rustom Mody
rustompmody at gmail.com
Sat Oct 28 03:04:51 EDT 2017
On Saturday, October 28, 2017 at 11:59:14 AM UTC+5:30, Andrew Z wrote:
> Yeah, lets start the war!
> // joking!
>
> But if i think about it... there are tons articles and flame wars about "a
> vs b".
> And yet, what if the question should be different:
>
> If you were to create the "ide" for yourself (think lego) , what are the
> functions that you _use_ and like a lot?
[Not really an answer to your question…]
But in a related direction:
I think we need to talk more systematically about
- programming-in-the-small: [< 70 lines — one or so screenfuls; only 1 file]
- -in-the-medium : all files in one directory
- -in-the-large : multiple directories/languages/OSes etc
- -huge : millions of lines; thousands of man-years
I think one of the main attractions (to me but also generally to teachers)
is that languages like python make programming-in-the-tiny a realistic possibility
ie a couple of lines worked out possibly file-less, at the interpreter prompt.
[The other day I was writing a program to split alternate lines of a file;
Apart from file-handling it was these two lines:
for x in lines[0::2]: print(x.strip())
for x in lines[1::2]: print(x.strip())
]
So coming to your question: IDEs are good for medium and (diminishingly) for large programs.
Useful python programs are often small; even tiny
More information about the Python-list
mailing list