👋 Selftaught Accessibility & Frontend Developer
💻 Dev & UX Accessibility Specialist @Atos | CPACC
🙆 Improving the world with accessible web content
✍️ Content creator, Tips on How To Get Into Tech
An article I HAD to read. Wow, I started with WebStorm but then switched to VSCode for the front end and wouldn't go back. But I use IntelliJ Edu for the backend when I write Java, and I would also try PyCharm and the other products because I like JetBrains Academy.
It's so interesting what developers prefer and for what reasons. Thanks for pointing out the benefits you see.
I've probably used most IDE's out there, but for my personal needs at this time of my career WebStorm has too many advantages I haven't seen elsewhere.
An article I HAD to read. Wow, I started with WebStorm but then switched to VSCode for the front end and wouldn't go back. But I use IntelliJ Edu for the backend when I write Java, and I would also try PyCharm and the other products because I like JetBrains Academy.
It's so interesting what developers prefer and for what reasons. Thanks for pointing out the benefits you see.
I've probably used most IDE's out there, but for my personal needs at this time of my career WebStorm has too many advantages I haven't seen elsewhere.
(Biggest being the test I think actually)
I am currently using PyCharm Community Edition to bring myself up to speed with Python (I am a VB.NET\C# engineer). I love it for its feature set...