Cool, show me a screenshot from, say, 5 years ago that looks like Sublime? From what I can see it looks something like this: https://blog.jetbrains.com/idea/2011/10/new-in-intellij-idea... I didn't say features, I said…
Sure, agreed, but I think you misunderstand my point. If I took away your Java IDE would you be able to get very far?
Dave Cheney gave a talk about error handling in Go that sheds some light on how the Go community thinks about errors: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsBF58Q-DnY
That you need an IDE to make a language bearable speaks volumes to the design of the language. Go is doing well because it realizes we can strip so much away, stay with the standard lib, and get real work done quickly.…
I'm not a Java developer, so I'm interested to know what the amazing parts of IntelliJ are. When I look at it it just looks like they ripped off the skin from Sublime Text and it has some debugging features that are…
Cool, show me a screenshot from, say, 5 years ago that looks like Sublime? From what I can see it looks something like this: https://blog.jetbrains.com/idea/2011/10/new-in-intellij-idea... I didn't say features, I said…
Sure, agreed, but I think you misunderstand my point. If I took away your Java IDE would you be able to get very far?
Dave Cheney gave a talk about error handling in Go that sheds some light on how the Go community thinks about errors: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsBF58Q-DnY
That you need an IDE to make a language bearable speaks volumes to the design of the language. Go is doing well because it realizes we can strip so much away, stay with the standard lib, and get real work done quickly.…
I'm not a Java developer, so I'm interested to know what the amazing parts of IntelliJ are. When I look at it it just looks like they ripped off the skin from Sublime Text and it has some debugging features that are…