On 2016-07-21 15:07, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Thu, Jul 21, 2016 at 11:56 PM,  <sigmaphine1...@gmail.com> wrote:
I'm learning Python and something is really unclear on the chapter im on.

So Python has its own IDE to write code but now it's talking about "code 
editors"

My confusion is so I need a code editor like Sublime text? Is that what Python 
IDE is for?

You can use any text editor to write your Python code. If you're using
nothing except Python, IDLE is excellent, but if you work with several
different languages, you may prefer Sublime, or Atom, or SciTE, or GNU
Nano, or something else. You can pick up pretty much any text editor
(not a word processor, and not Windows Notepad, but virtually anything
else will do) and use that to work on your code.

Without knowing what chapter of what book you're reading, I can't
advise any further.

The key is that the editor should work with "plain text".

A "code editor" is one that works with plain text, but has been designed with programming in mind. It will have useful features such as syntax colouring (different colours for reserved words, strings, ...), case conversion, easy indentation of multiple lines, and so on.

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