I generally prefer to use ATOM https://atom.io/ It is highly customizable and had add ons for most languages. Essentially until I worked for red Hat, I was an emacs user.
-- Jerry Feldman <[email protected]> Boston Linux and Unix http://www.blu.org PGP key id: 6F6BB6E7 PGP Key fingerprint: 0EDC 2FF5 53A6 8EED 84D1 3050 5715 B88D 6F6 B B6E7 On Fri, Sep 23, 2022, 11:25 AM <[email protected]> wrote: > I've been using vi (vim) and GNU make for decades. Through the years, I've > tried to use an IDE, but they are all so bad for this type of project. > Every IDE I've used has had a very proprietary view of how it should do > projects. There was one on Windows years ago called CodeWright which was > pretty good. > > Before all that I used brief. > > Are there any IDEs that are easy to use and just a simple "drop in" to the > work flow? > > I'd like an IDE that can run make, parse the compiler output, find the > errors, and open the source file at the location of the error? > > I looked at KDevelop, and in 5.2 it doesn't even seem to allow you to edit > the project build tools any more. > > Any suggestions, and no, Eclipse is not an option. > > Lastly, I know I can do a lot of this with vim, ctags, etc. but I would > like to use some more modern tools and maybe make life a little easier. > > _______________________________________________ > Discuss mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss > _______________________________________________ Discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
