söndag 30 augusti 2009 20:07:44 skrev Daniele Segato <daniele.bilug@xxxxxxxxx>: > Il giorno mar, 25/08/2009 alle 13.47 +0100, John Tapsell ha scritto: > > 2009/8/25 Frank Münnich <git@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > > > One thing I would like to ask you: what, if any, IDEs are you working with? > > > > I think everyone just uses vim/emacs :-) > > I can't get how would one take vim or emacs instead of an IDE like > Eclipse. > That's probably because I'm mainingly a Java developer and i don't know > vim/emacs very much. > > What are the advantages of developing git with vim/emacs over an IDE? Vim and Emacs has, and have had tools suitable for C and other languages for ages. If you have learned to master them it's hard to find anything as good. If you do java the tools in vim and emacs are not as developed as those for older languages, which Eclipse is originally developed as a tool for Java development and it shines at it. For non-java things vary. The C/C++ support in Eclipse is getting better, but it' nowhere near what exists for Java. Learning and avoiding its's bugs and quirks is probably not worth it if you already have other good or better tools. VIM and Emacs are really IDE's. In particular you can login to emacs directly and never leave it until you log out. Besdides all you pogramming tools you have your email and (yes) your mp3 player there. That's pretty integrated to me. -- robin -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html