No, no -- that's good. Emacs has versions for Windows, Mac OSX, and Linux (of course). Now I have 2, Visual Studio Code and emacs. Good enough. I mean, if anybody has any other packages I should include in my documentation, let me kno, but I am good with what I've got. In fact, I'd be interested in any comments/suggestions for my documentation about doing research on our beowulf cluster: https://www.math.wisc.edu/wiki/index.php/Using_the_Wisconsin_Undergraduate_R...) On 2/5/20 6:49 PM, Jason White wrote:
I use Emacs even on a Microsoft Windows system, and of course under Linux. Under Mac OS, TextMate seems to be a good option, but I haven't used it extensively, and it's primarily a text editor rather than an IDE, hence perhaps not suitable for your purposes.
On 2/5/20, 13:12, "Bill Dengler" <codeofdusk@gmail.com> wrote:
Emacs/Emacspeak has some IDE-like packages…
Bill
> On 5 Feb 2020, at 12:43, John G Heim <jheim@math.wisc.edu> wrote: > > I am writing up some documentation for students who are developing code on a linux cluster I maintain. Any recommendations for multi-platform IDE that I should include? The only one I've got so far is microsoft Visual Studio Code. > > > > > -- > John G. Heim; jheim@math.wisc.edu; 608-263-4189 > _______________________________________________ > Blind-sysadmins mailing list -- blind-sysadmins@lists.hodgsonfamily.org > To unsubscribe send an email to blind-sysadmins-leave@lists.hodgsonfamily.org _______________________________________________ Blind-sysadmins mailing list -- blind-sysadmins@lists.hodgsonfamily.org To unsubscribe send an email to blind-sysadmins-leave@lists.hodgsonfamily.org
-- John G. Heim, jheim@math.wisc.edu, 608-263-4189