Well, I am recent Windows escapee, and was dismayed by lack of Pyscripter for Linux.
Hold on... there is hope! Pyscripter works great using WINE. search http://groups.google.com/group/PyScripter?hl=en for "Linux" Enjoy! Paul Rudin wrote: > jwelby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > >> This is a fair question. I didn't phrase my post too well. >> >> I find PyScripter does pretty much everything I need in terms of doing >> actual development for Python. My use of 'lightweight' is by no means >> a criticism of PyScripter - it's more of a compliment, as it refers to >> the relatively modest demands that it makes on my system compared with >> Eclipse, which can be hog. >> >> The main reason I have used Eclipse for larger, team based, projects >> is for the source control plug-ins. Eclipse has plug-in support for >> cvs and svn. PyScripter may have this too - perhaps I've missed it. >> (I'm away from my Windows box at the moment, otherwise I would check). >> Of course, there are other ways to implement source control without it >> needing to be integrated in the IDE, so even this need not put off >> anyone who wants to use PyScripter with source control. >> >> Summary - unless you need the added flexibility offered by Eclipse >> plug-ins, PyScripter is a great tool for developing with Python on >> Windows. >> > > I'm not sure if you count emacs as "lightweight" but it's certainly > less resource hungry than eclipse/pydev, and does have integrated > cvs/svn functionality. > -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list