Hi Bobby,
I'm working through getting VS Code going with Python. I'll see if I can write
up the particulars. It sounds like it should be pretty easy.
==========
Jim Homme
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-----Original Message-----
From: pythonvis-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <pythonvis-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf
Of Bobby McNab
Sent: Friday, April 17, 2020 10:56 PM
To: pythonvis@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [pythonvis] Re: Accessible Python Environment
Yeh,
Stick to basics, like notepad++, Ed Sharp or PFE.
BTW, I haven't tried visual studio code yet. could someone give me some
details on how to get it up and running with Python?
Bobby
On 18/04/2020 02:53, Carter Temm wrote:
Unfortunately not, though it's less of an issue than one might think
right off the bat.
Personally my optimal environment consists of the indentNav NVDA
add-on for simplified code navigation, a decent text editor (notepad2
or notepad++), and an open console when I'm ready to test. Python's
interpreted nature makes churning out stable code a breeze, allowing
you to test language specific features and step through your program
in realtime.
If you decide an IDE is a must have, visual studio code is probably
the way to go, providing more features than most devs have any reason
to need without the price tag or overhead offered by other VS
additions.
Out of curiosity, what is your level of experience? What sort of
environments, if any, have you found to be effective in the past?
Should be easy to get you comfortably set up and ready to go.
On 4/17/20, Rich De Steno <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I'm new to Python. Is the Idle IDE accessible with the
screen-reading programs like NVDA and Jaws? If not, what is the best
environment for writing code?
--
Rich De Steno
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