Back when I was a Rails developer, Mac was THE way to go. TextMate is pure awesomeness.
TextMate is pure awesomeness.
I haven't tried XCode i'll have a look after this post. I have Smultron, TextWrangler and TextEdit, but they don't check syntax in a fashion i can get used to yet. (Probably mostly because i'm a Notepad++ Fanboi.)
I just find error checking so fast in NP++ and often near impossible in others. The way the colouring works as well is phenomenal. If i'm honest though, as a basic coder and a basic user of NP++ i could likely get over my issue with time.
Something very simple, which i find infuriating for example. If i highlight a div close tag in a php page, it will highlight the open tag regardless of where it is within the document, which doesn't happen in any editor for the mac i have tried. It will do it as html, but if it's php it doesn't check the html within, which means for speed, i'm best off doing it on my pc.
I'll check Xcode now though, because if i find a decent enough solution my pc can likely rot.
EDIT: Looks like you have to be a registered mac developer.![]()
Oh and since I got a Mac I became 43.63% more attractive to the opposite sex. Fact.
Mac's also make you 57.37% more attractive to the same sex. Fact.
Back when I was a Rails developer, Mac was THE way to go. TextMate is pure awesomeness.
You just sign up, pretty sure it's free.
And why not try Coda or TextMate? TextMate from what I remember is very similar to Notepad ++.
I <3 Quicksilver more than cheerleaders
Macs are pretty good but even since I got one I still use my pc almost exclusively since many of the programs I use daily only run on it. It makes a good unix server in a pinch though. There's definitely some cool stuff on mac I wish windows had like Expose and such.
What's so special about quicksilver? All I ever used it for was launching applications, and spotlight does that. I'm sure there's something about quicksilver i'm missing out on.