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#71 already brings an important issue: free software editors should come first.
on the other side the list did not age well:
Thonny is probably nowadays the best way for starting with Python on Windows (it comes with all batteries included... and is small to download)
Visual Studio Code is Free software and one of the editors of choices for professional programmers.
PyCharm can also be considered as Free software, is all batteries included and of professional grade.
Spyder, the default editor / editor in Anaconda.
On the other other side:
Atom is disappearing: still worth to list it?
Sublime is probably still a good editor, but I don't see why it should be on a list for beginners.
Geany, TextMate, Gedit, Kate, Komodo should probably not be mentioned (never seen a beginner or a professional programmer using them. of course there are people using them, but they are not common tools for programmers.
Finally:
It's probably worth to list Jupyter as a possible solution, for those with a data science background and who are in an environment where it is in common use (I would not suggest its use in a general text book, but it should probably be mentioned as a possible way to learn python)
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
#71 already brings an important issue: free software editors should come first.
on the other side the list did not age well:
On the other other side:
Finally:
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: