Your fav non-MS Dev environment

Atom and nano.

For Python mostly, but I intend to delve into GoLang soon.
 
That too! Just poking some fun though :)

For me it's mostly Netbeans, some Notepad++ and vim, working majority of my time on a LAMP stack
 
Notepad++ and Sublime 3.

Notepad++ for quick edits, pseudo and notes.

Sublime 3 for all those fancy plugins for web dev.

I have atom installed, I just haven't gotten around to trying it out.
 
In my ideal world, I would use only JetBrains IDEs: PyCharm for Python/Django, IntelliJ for Java etc.

In the real world, where people refuse to pay for stuff, I mainly use Eclipse and its derivatives and whatever flavour of horrid IDE is forced upon me by the latest embedded C project.

To be honest, I really hate eclipse most of the time and I probably spend about 5-10% of my total time working in Java, fighting with eclipse and its plugins instead of writing actual code.
 
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I like XCode. For C++ and Obj C.

The env I use mostly though is PL/SQL Developer and Oracle Forms, but I definatly wouldn't call Oracle Forms my favorite :)
 
I recently started using Code::Blocks (on Linux) loving it for my needs. I'm not a programmer by profession so this is just for fun/hobby coding.
For PHP I've been using Geany for a long time, it's really lightweight and uncomplicated.

Otherwise I just use vim in a terminal.
 
Netbeans for projects, Sublime Text for quick editing... PHP, HTML, CSS, jQuery
 
I've been playing around with brackets for HTML5, CSS, javascript and am really liking it.

I currently use eclipse for java development, though I liked netbeans too.
 
I recently started using Code::Blocks (on Linux) loving it for my needs. I'm not a programmer by profession so this is just for fun/hobby coding.
For PHP I've been using Geany for a long time, it's really lightweight and uncomplicated.

Otherwise I just use vim in a terminal.

I also love using Code::Blocks for c/c++ when developing on Linux. Its lean and mean :D
 
Eclipse and occasionally Netbeans for Java development. Brackets, Sublime Text & VS Code (yes I know it's a Visual Studio offshoot but it's very new and pretty impressive) for Node projects.
 
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