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Comments
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31414968yWell, non-students (and many students as well) usually earn money in exchange for their work. Having money really helps with buying things. -
Microsoft has a student program that can help you with free software and resources. Most companies do.
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J4s0n13318yEither your work pays for it or you have to find free open source Tools (which are awesome most of the time). -
Eventually you start man minding it and develop solely in nano for arch Linux, jk we pirate it
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vringar16048y -
tahnik385668yI am a student and I don't intentionally use any paid program that is free for us. I don't want to be dependent on them. I enjoy VSCode with vim and other plugins. -
@tahnik don't put yourself out. Your employer will likely pay for your IDE if you're in the US/EU.
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tahnik385668y@starless I know, I am doing my internship right now (part of degree). I get Visual Studio Pro and QT enterprise edition from them. Most of the time I do my coding in vscode because it has my preference saved. It does a great job for coding. For debugging I switch to IDE. -
J4s0n13318yWhen you tweak eclipse it is superb, but you have to Invest some time. Also vsCode is awesome.

Time for some serious debugging
About sums up my day.
!Rant
How do non-students get their IDE's?
I couldn't imagine working without Visual Studio Enterprise + ReSharper and all the Jetbrains tools, but I wouldn't by them myself (because I'm a poor student)...so how do you guys do it?
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