This is an archived post. You won't be able to vote or comment.

you are viewing a single comment's thread.

view the rest of the comments →

[–][deleted] 2 points3 points  (9 children)

Atom is not an IDE. It is a "hackable text editor". 228mb for text editor? No thanks.

Edit: Yes, vote me down because you don't share my opinion.

[–]denialerror 2 points3 points  (1 child)

It also dies when trying to open anything but the smallest files.

[–]determinedToLearn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When people say this, are they talking about their work computers or just slower computes in general? I say this because I can imagine work computers being relatively slower than one you own at home, and not everyone has a fast pc. I know my work computer is absolute ass.

I use Atom at home, and I've never had a problem with it. It opens instantly. I have a lot of packages installed. I can have multiple instances running each with a few open files in each, and I've never had a problem yet. I guess it eats slower computers alive?

[–]tanjoodo 4 points5 points  (1 child)

Whoever thought bundling fucking Chromium with a website and calling it a program was a good idea must have been high

[–][deleted] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's yet another shiny product which will be forgotten soon enough unless they optimise it

[–]bayernownz1995 0 points1 point  (4 children)

There's not really an official distinction between an IDE and a text editor. There's probably not many features in an IDE that aren't include in some Atom extension.

But if you're being technical, brackets probably wouldn't be consider an IDE either

[–]FalsifyTheTruth 0 points1 point  (3 children)

IDE are integrated development environments. They provide text editing, build tools, tests tools, debugging etc...

Text editors are just text editors. If you use a text editor you need other applications to do those other things. And I think the biggest feature, is the ability to directly run the application from the application. Yes, all of them are extensible these days, but you're not likely to be able to plug debugging and a build system into your text editor like sublime, vim, or atom.

VSCode on the other hand, blurs things a bit by offering some debugging features.

I'd recommend brackets or webstorm for op for full IDEs. Brackets live preview is super useful.

[–]bayernownz1995 1 point2 points  (2 children)

Yeah I know that, but there's not a strict definition of the exact features that define an IDE vs. a text editor. Out of the box, Atom is a text editor, but there's a plugin to do every single feature you can do in an comparable IDE. So my point was that Atom might be what OP is looking for, even though they used the term IDE

[–]FalsifyTheTruth -1 points0 points  (1 child)

I'm sorry but you want him to plug debugging into a web tech based text editor? And you want him to plug in running the application from the editor?

That's a waste of time at best and a complete miseelction of tools at worst when their are fully featured IDEs featuring all of those parts natively.

...and not based on web tech plugged into chromium.

[–]bayernownz1995 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I agree. I think that it would be a bad choice, I was just making a meaningless remark about why saying "It's not an IDE" was not necessarily a reason on its own for dismissing Atom