Well if we are talking the best. The best is still boxer. It has shown white
spaces and line numbers on a single key command it is to bad the creator of
boxer stopped in 2014 he had a blind friend and kept the editor blind
accessible. I have been using boxer since MsDos when it was called TKO. The
problem I have with all the IDE's and editors is how hard it is to get to
simple features that make the things useful for the blind. PyCharm gets better
every time NVDA updates its access bridge work but I think my list goes Boxer,
then Notepadd+++ then VS Code followed by Visual studio, and finally PyCharm.
With that said now that I use IntelliJ every day for Java PyCharm makes more
since. I think the problem is less accessibility when it comes to pycharm and
more just a confusing over all environment.
-----Original Message-----
From: program-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <program-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf
Of jacob kruger
Sent: Tuesday, November 15, 2022 6:45 AM
To: program-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [program-l] Re: article: Teach Python with the Mu editor
On that note, has pyCharm community edition improved recently?
Ask since, last/only time tried it, it was not really worth considering?
So, yes, at this stage, in terms of actual interaction, would have to say VS
code seems best to me, but, notepad++ is also suitable in some python contexts,
and, I still just use edSharp for some forms of activities.
Jacob Kruger
+2782 413 4791
"Resistance is futile...but, acceptance is versatile..."
On 2022/11/15 13:41, kperry@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
I will have to try it again. Last time I tried it 8 months ago the** To leave the list, click on the immediately-following link:-
accessibility was awful andpychar and vscode are much better.
-----Original Message-----
From: program-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <program-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
On Behalf Of jacob kruger
Sent: Tuesday, November 15, 2022 5:58 AM
To: program-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [program-l] article: Teach Python with the Mu editor
Firstly, here's the link the article mentioned in the subject line:
https://opensource.com/article/20/9/teach-python-mu
Effectively, it's to do with a code editor specifically put together to
initially at least be a form of teaching aid/tool for teaching young students
to learn python.
Secondly, Mu does seem relatively usable - just gave it a quick go - and, if
not perfect, does seem to offer specific forms of learning material, forms of
intellisense, etc.:
https://codewith.mu/en/download