I'm on the faculty at Boston University in the computer science department, where I teach software engineering, intro courses, and application architecture and development. Also a bit of a Deadhead.
Webstorm for Node projects; I appreciate the variety of plugins, and its configurability. A plus is that I can set it up for Emacs key bindings. The JetBrains family of products is tops on my list, whatever the language or stack. If I'm doing something Python-y I'll fire up PyCharm.
Emacs when I'm on the command line in either Linux or MacOs. Been using it since the 90s and it's all just muscle memory.
Xcode for C++ projects. I find it very intuitive for some reason.
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Webstorm for Node projects; I appreciate the variety of plugins, and its configurability. A plus is that I can set it up for Emacs key bindings. The JetBrains family of products is tops on my list, whatever the language or stack. If I'm doing something Python-y I'll fire up PyCharm.
Emacs when I'm on the command line in either Linux or MacOs. Been using it since the 90s and it's all just muscle memory.
Xcode for C++ projects. I find it very intuitive for some reason.