Ranter
Join devRant
Do all the things like
++ or -- rants, post your own rants, comment on others' rants and build your customized dev avatar
Sign Up
Pipeless API
From the creators of devRant, Pipeless lets you power real-time personalized recommendations and activity feeds using a simple API
Learn More
Comments
-
31415097yWell, 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.
-
J4s0n13357yEither 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
-
vringar16637y
-
tahnik389907yI 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.
-
tahnik389907y@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.
-
J4s0n13357yWhen you tweak eclipse it is superb, but you have to Invest some time. Also vsCode is awesome.
!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?
undefined
jetbrains
resharper
visual studio