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Suggesting an IDE to new Python programmers

I often come across questions (by users that are relatively new to programming) that would have never been posted here if they had been using an IDE that can easily detect a missing ' and inform the user.

Those questions are usually of no use to anyone (Typographical errors or 100th duplicate) and have a trivial "solution": use an IDE.

On top of that, I feel like my IDE has helped me speed up my learning by a lot e.g. warning me of default mutable arguments.

As a conclusion, suggesting IDE usage can decrease our wasted time a lot, and increase new users' productivity.


How should I do so in order to avoid promoting a specific IDE How should I phrase my IDE-suggesting comment, in order to avoid promoting a specific IDE? I

I am only familiar with PyCharm, and questions like "What IDE to use in Python" contain too much information and some of it can become or already is outdated.

Suggesting an IDE to new programmers

I often come across questions (by users that are relatively new to programming) that would have never been posted here if they had been using an IDE that can easily detect a missing ' and inform the user.

Those questions are usually of no use to anyone (Typographical errors or 100th duplicate) and have a trivial "solution": use an IDE.

On top of that, I feel like my IDE has helped me speed up my learning by a lot e.g. warning me of default mutable arguments.

As a conclusion, suggesting IDE usage can decrease our wasted time a lot, and increase new users' productivity.


How should I do so in order to avoid promoting a specific IDE? I am only familiar with PyCharm, and questions like "What IDE to use in Python" contain too much information and some of it can become or already is outdated.

Suggesting an IDE to new Python programmers

I often come across questions (by users that are relatively new to programming) that would have never been posted here if they had been using an IDE that can easily detect a missing ' and inform the user.

Those questions are usually of no use to anyone (Typographical errors or 100th duplicate) and have a trivial "solution": use an IDE.

On top of that, I feel like my IDE has helped me speed up my learning by a lot e.g. warning me of default mutable arguments.

As a conclusion, suggesting IDE usage can decrease our wasted time a lot, and increase new users' productivity.


How should I phrase my IDE-suggesting comment, in order to avoid promoting a specific IDE?

I am only familiar with PyCharm, and questions like "What IDE to use in Python" contain too much information and some of it can become or already is outdated.

Source Link
user
  • 5.7k
  • 17
  • 25

Suggesting an IDE to new programmers

I often come across questions (by users that are relatively new to programming) that would have never been posted here if they had been using an IDE that can easily detect a missing ' and inform the user.

Those questions are usually of no use to anyone (Typographical errors or 100th duplicate) and have a trivial "solution": use an IDE.

On top of that, I feel like my IDE has helped me speed up my learning by a lot e.g. warning me of default mutable arguments.

As a conclusion, suggesting IDE usage can decrease our wasted time a lot, and increase new users' productivity.


How should I do so in order to avoid promoting a specific IDE? I am only familiar with PyCharm, and questions like "What IDE to use in Python" contain too much information and some of it can become or already is outdated.