![]() ![]() I felt so too when I came across them 3-4 years ago. In a nutshell, these are editors that reside entirely on a remote server and are accessible via the browser. Both are two different things and as a developer, you should be familiar with these multi-language IDE. However, if you’re into Web development, there’s an alternative I want you to think about - online code editors! You can also call them cloud-based code editors.ĭon’t confuse code editor with an integrated development environment (IDE). ![]() Honestly, I won’t even dare to go there! □ □ Nothing is more frustrating than having to struggle with the editor when you’re writing code (think of how annoying it is when you’ve got to shoot off a lengthy and urgent email on a new keyboard!). Code editors reduce mental friction and allow you to be more productive, which is why they’re so important and get so much attention. ![]() They know their way around the editor - its strengths, weaknesses, limits, quirks, and hidden gems. A typical programmer spends almost all of their time (More than 98%, if I were to wager) on the code editor of choice. Sure, human beings manage to make a big deal out of everything, but I think code editors are particular when it comes to programmers. If you’re badly looking for attention, all you need to do is go to a programming community and start a thread like “Why I think X (pick any popular code editor) sucks/is the best,” grab some beer and relax.Īrguments, counter-arguments, and insults will keep pouring into and out of the discussion all night long, and it will take many months before the venom in the thread will cool off. ![]() To some, Vim is the only sensible editor ever created, while to others everything that doesn’t fit the Inception-like spirally head-spinning world of Emacs is only fit for ridicule. ![]()
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