[…] to read not only for those who are simply investigating the project but also who are contributing to it. Though I’ve shared a few plugins specifically for Coda on how to automate this, but we all use different editors, have different formatting techniques, and so on. The thing is, there’s not much we can do […]
Search: “coda” (Page 3 of 4)
We found 18 results for your search.
Yesterday, I shared this whole little mini-rant about all of the various IDEs I’ve tried (like Coda, Atom, and Visual Studio Code) over the past few years. https://twitter.com/tommcfarlin/status/874238126591533056 You can click through to read the whole thing, but this gist of it is that I’ve tried PhpStorm off and on for years, but it was […]
[…] “just write the damn tests” nor can I say that I think it’s pragmatic to do so. And perhaps I’ll cover that last sentence in another post. Coda Just before drafting this post, I came across an article Kent Beck : “I get paid for code that works, not for tests” which is from 2013 […]
[…] of stuff available. Microsoft has had their IntelliSense available in Visual Studio for decades now. We’ve had Java autocomplete functionality in a variety of IDEs, and even Coda has a plugin for WordPress autocomplete. Bringing something like this to Atom makes sense. As I said earlier in the post: This shouldn’t be used as […]
[…] be, sometimes you will be. And if it’s in the latter case, use it as an opportunity to get better – it’s so much better that way. Coda I’d feel as if I was shortchanging this post if I didn’t mention the fact that sometimes it’s okay just to keep quiet. There are times […]
