I use JetBrains IDEs and Visual Studio in tandem. Within JetBrains IDEs, I use IntelliJ. IntelliJ and Visual Studio are what I use primarily. Developing code and writing code is the key use case for IntelliJ. For me, the UI is what stands out. I do not know if it is not that appreciated, but the UI for IntelliJ works well for me. Because I have been using it for a very long time, I am comfortable using IntelliJ and have not switched to other solutions. I primarily write Java code, which is why IntelliJ works best for me. When I need to switch to something like Python for another purpose, that is when I use Visual Studio. I have not explored the new solutions that have come out from OpenAI yet. These two tools are what I am more comfortable with, which is why I continue to use them.
Our main use case is to program APIs in Microsoft Net Core >= 2.2. The development of APIs under JetBrains Rider allows us to use the Microsoft framework under Linux natively as if we were doing it from Windows. I never liked Visual Studio Enterprise in any of its versions. I started in Visual Studio Enterprise 2008 and I have seen how the tool has improved over the years. That said, the lack of usability and constant bugs made me dislike that tool version after version.
It enables us to develop a software that takes configuration Information for services, for servers, for Access Rights, and then generates all IBM MQSC scripts, all documentation (used within SharePoint), and provides a test framework to smoke test all services and queues on proper configuration.
An Integrated Development Environment (IDE) is a software application that provides comprehensive facilities to computer programmers for software development. IDEs increase productivity by offering tools such as a source code editor, build automation, and a debugger.
IDEs streamline the development lifecycle by providing a suite of functionalities that only need one installation package. By integrating numerous development tools into one platform, developers reduce the overhead of...
I use JetBrains IDEs and Visual Studio in tandem. Within JetBrains IDEs, I use IntelliJ. IntelliJ and Visual Studio are what I use primarily. Developing code and writing code is the key use case for IntelliJ. For me, the UI is what stands out. I do not know if it is not that appreciated, but the UI for IntelliJ works well for me. Because I have been using it for a very long time, I am comfortable using IntelliJ and have not switched to other solutions. I primarily write Java code, which is why IntelliJ works best for me. When I need to switch to something like Python for another purpose, that is when I use Visual Studio. I have not explored the new solutions that have come out from OpenAI yet. These two tools are what I am more comfortable with, which is why I continue to use them.
Our main use case is to program APIs in Microsoft Net Core >= 2.2. The development of APIs under JetBrains Rider allows us to use the Microsoft framework under Linux natively as if we were doing it from Windows. I never liked Visual Studio Enterprise in any of its versions. I started in Visual Studio Enterprise 2008 and I have seen how the tool has improved over the years. That said, the lack of usability and constant bugs made me dislike that tool version after version.
It enables us to develop a software that takes configuration Information for services, for servers, for Access Rights, and then generates all IBM MQSC scripts, all documentation (used within SharePoint), and provides a test framework to smoke test all services and queues on proper configuration.
I am using it for a Java Maven project for an important bank located in Argentina. It is integrated into the Git and connected to a Sybase database.