Im switching to Ubuntu after struggling with windows, i will replace notepad++ with Vim and finally get into terminal...Im interested in what OS / Dev Enviroment other Node.js developers use?
Im switching to Ubuntu after struggling with windows, i will replace notepad++ with Vim and finally get into terminal...Im interested in what OS / Dev Enviroment other Node.js developers use?
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Eclipse is OK, but IntelliJ (which I use in my other job) is better.
I use Miller's JavaScript Lint instead of Crockford's JSLint, because it catches more real problems and can be configured to ignore non-problems.
OS X, Eclipse, Aptana pluginReasons: Eclipse debugger, aptana terminals inside of eclipse, git integration.- mitch
On Thursday, September 20, 2012 9:42:27 AM UTC-7, Andrew Mclagan wrote:Im switching to Ubuntu after struggling with windows, i will replace notepad++ with Vim and finally get into terminal...Im interested in what OS / Dev Enviroment other Node.js developers use?
Darren
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Ubuntu 12.04 x64 with Gnome Shell, WebStorm 5. Local mongo, redis.
vim / linux debian
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// alex
21.09.2012, 21:10, "P. Douglas Reeder" <reed...@gmail.com>:
> I develop under OS X (Snow Leopard), using Eclipse and the command line. The OS X command line environment is close enough to the Linux command line environment on the machines I deploy to.
>
> Eclipse is OK, but IntelliJ (which I use in my other job) is better.
>
> I use Miller's JavaScript Lint instead of Crockford's JSLint, because it catches more real problems and can be configured to ignore non-problems.
>
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Christian Taltas, Cofounder and CTO
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i use sublime text 2 & crunchbang
On Sep 24, 2012 8:42 AM, "Alexey Petrushin" <alexey.p...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Mac OS + Textmate / Sublime
>
> As for Ubuntu - while on vacation temporarily switched to Ubuntu from Mac OS - only to discover that after all those Years Ubuntu even doesn't have Cntr+C/V (You has to press Cntrl+Shift+C/V) working in console, and tons of other quirks, UI experience is far from good.
Why on earth do you want control+c and control+v overriding the terminals input? Osx gets away with using its native clipboard bindings because option+anything doesn't clash with tty commands. Most control+anything key bindings have common and essential meanings in tty apps.
I'm my ~18 years of Unix style development gnome-terminal is the best tty emulator out there.
> Seems like Ubuntu freeze for infinite time in the state of half-product, it's good for temporarily usage, but not acceptable for professional day-to-day usage.
>
Debian (moving to arch). A compiled stack of: zsh, rxvt, tmux, vim, node, xmonad.
Update: huh, I didn't realized that You meant often used tty ctrl+c signal :). Yea, agreed it's usedeven more often than copy.Still using ctrl+shift+c/v for copy/paste feels very inconvenient.
On Tuesday, October 2, 2012 2:22:48 AM UTC+4, Alexey Petrushin wrote:> Why on earth do you want control+c and control+v overriding the terminals input?Because in most cases it's used to copy/paste text from and to. I believe copy/paste support ismore important from the perspective of ergonomics and usability than tty support.
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Sublime Text2 is not free, it needs registration to use it..
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Has Anybody tried to install sublime text2 on ubuntu, i need guidance how to install it on ubuntu..
Or tmux: ctrl+b [ <space> alt+w to copy and ctrl+b ] or screen's variation or vi's ctrl/shift+v y to copy and p to paste, or gpm left click to immediately copy a buffer.
Copy/paste is no where near as standard as anyone thinks or would hope.
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That's the exact setup I have. Also have a couple vim entries to make my life simpler:This just executes the file I'm currently working on:And I use this to quick wrap code that I know I won't want committed: