Python development without PyCharm (or IntelliJ) and the IdeaVim plugin is unbearable. List usages is a game changer. Don’t care much for anything else.
Yup. Emacs, here, but same thing. Never used PyCharm or any other Python-capable IDE, and I’ve been coding large python projects for the same company for almost a decade.
Yeah, well, that’s just Python for you. List usages is now an LSP feature for most languages, so will work with “lesser” editors too.
All that being said, I use Intellij with Java daily, so I can see where you’re coming from. But for example Rust or Go works wonderfully with Neovim (or VSCode).
Python development without PyCharm (or IntelliJ) and the IdeaVim plugin is unbearable. List usages is a game changer. Don’t care much for anything else.
Whaaat? I program Python with plain vim. C or Java, on the other hand, with a large enough codebase, is unbearable without an IDE.
Depends on how large your Python projects are. If you have a million lines of Python code, navigating quickly and directed is invaluable.
I used plain vim before for Python projects, but these never grew above 50k lines of code.
Yup. Emacs, here, but same thing. Never used PyCharm or any other Python-capable IDE, and I’ve been coding large python projects for the same company for almost a decade.
Yeah, well, that’s just Python for you. List usages is now an LSP feature for most languages, so will work with “lesser” editors too.
All that being said, I use Intellij with Java daily, so I can see where you’re coming from. But for example Rust or Go works wonderfully with Neovim (or VSCode).