I have always been curious about why so many IDEs support "projects". I 
would be interested to know why many people seem to find them useful. I do 
a lot of coding every day, but I have never found a use for the projects 
feature. What should a good "projects" feature do?

Cheers,
Daniel.


On Tuesday, 15 September 2015 15:06:03 UTC+2, David Higgins wrote:
>
> The julia-client package for Atom is from the Juno project. It requires 
> Julia 0.4 so I haven't tried it yet. But there is support for syntax 
> highlighting from the language-julia package.
>
> I've started using Atom, it's quite nice. But there is no project support 
> yet, which really sucks from my point of view. I find the editor slightly 
> more intuitive than Sublime Text, which many aspects of it are blatantly 
> modelled on, but without support for projects it's only good for a certain 
> style of coding.
>
> David.
>
> On Tuesday, 15 September 2015 14:34:26 UTC+2, Sisyphuss wrote:
>>
>> Thanks, both. By the way, is there any relation between Juno and Atom? 
>> What's the trend?
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tuesday, September 15, 2015 at 1:59:55 PM UTC+2, Nils Gudat wrote:
>>>
>>> Yes, it does (that's the point of having the bundle(!) available on the 
>>> website).
>>> To connect to a different instance of Julia, follow the steps here: 
>>> http://junolab.org/docs/install-manual.html
>>> However, I don't think JunoLT is working with 0.4 (at least it wasn't 
>>> when I last checked two weeks ago), and in general efforts have shifted to 
>>> the new Juno Atom client.
>>>
>>> Long story short, if you want to work in 0.4 you should probably do 
>>> this: https://github.com/JunoLab/atom-julia-client/tree/master/manual
>>>
>>

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