On Wed, Jun 8, 2011 at 9:25 AM, looselytyped <raju.gan...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Finally, I agree with many others on this thread - Emacs is a popular
> editor among many a lisp programmer, and Clojure is no different.
> Unfortunately if you are not familiar with it, it presents a two-fold
> problem - you need to learn to use the editor along with learning
> Clojure. My take on this - if you are familiar with an IDE like
> Eclipse or NetBeans or even IntelliJ just download the plugin and
> start writing code.

For what it's worth, I'm not really a Java nor an IDE guy, but I fully
agree with this. Don't let anyone convince you that you must learn
editor X or environment Y if what you really want to learn is Clojure.
People are using all sorts of editors and environments to be
productive in Clojure. Use a tool you're comfortable with while
stretching your brain in new functional directions.

Then once you've got Clojure under belt, go get a real editor. ;-)

--Chouser
http://joyofclojure.com/

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