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  2. Comparison of debuggers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_debuggers

    GDB: 1986 GNU Debugger Any compiled to machine code: Unix-like systems, Windows: No Yes GPL: 13.2, 27 May 2023 IDB: 2012 Intel Debugger Any compiled to machine code: Windows, Linux, OS X: No ? Proprietary: 13.0.1, 2013 LLDB: 2003? LLVM Debugger Any compiled to machine code: macOS i386, x86-64 and AArch64, iOS, Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, Windows: No ?

  3. Cloud9 IDE - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud9_IDE

    Cloud9 IDE is an Online IDE (integrated development environment), published as open source from version 2.0, until version 3.0. It supports multiple programming languages, including C, C++, PHP, Ruby, Perl, Python, JavaScript with Node.js, and Go. It is written almost entirely in JavaScript, and uses Node.js on the back-end. The editor ...

  4. SlickEdit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SlickEdit

    SlickEdit, previously known as Visual SlickEdit, [1] is a cross-platform commercial source code editor, text editor, and Integrated Development Environment developed by SlickEdit, Inc. SlickEdit has integrated debuggers for GNU C/C++, Java, WinDbg, Clang C/C++ LLDB, Groovy, Google Go, Python, Perl, Ruby, Scala, PHP, Xcode, and Android JVM/NDK.

  5. Comparison of integrated development environments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_integrated...

    Not a General IDE; a small scale UML editor DrJava: Permissive: No Yes Yes Yes Yes Solaris: No Java 8 only (2014) Eclipse JDT: EPL: Yes No [40] Yes Yes Yes FreeBSD, JVM, Solaris: Yes Yes Yes Yes Geany: GPL: No No Yes Yes Yes FreeBSD, AIX, OpenBSD, Solaris, other Unix: No Greenfoot: GPL: No Yes Yes Yes Yes Solaris: No Not a General IDE; a 2D ...

  6. GNU Debugger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Debugger

    GDB was first written by Richard Stallman in 1986 as part of his GNU system, after his GNU Emacs was "reasonably stable". [4] GDB is free software released under the GNU General Public License (GPL). It was modeled after the DBX debugger, which came with Berkeley Unix distributions. [4] From 1990 to 1993 it was maintained by John Gilmore. [5]

  7. PythonAnywhere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PythonAnywhere

    PythonAnywhere is an online integrated development environment (IDE) and web hosting service (Platform as a service) based on the Python programming language. [1] Founded by Giles Thomas and Robert Smithson in 2012, it provides in-browser access to server-based Python and Bash command-line interfaces, along with a code editor with syntax highlighting.

  8. List of Python software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Python_software

    Codelobster, a cross-platform IDE for various languages, including Python. EasyEclipse, an open source IDE for Python and other languages. Eclipse,with the Pydev plug-in. Eclipse supports many other languages as well. Emacs, with the built-in python-mode. [1] Eric, an IDE for Python and Ruby; Geany, IDE for Python development and other languages.

  9. PyCharm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PyCharm

    PyCharm was released to the market of the Python-focused IDEs to compete with PyDev (for Eclipse) or the more broadly focused Komodo IDE by ActiveState. [ citation needed ] The beta version of the product was released in July 2010, with the 1.0 arriving 3 months later.