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If you had $150 to spend on one or more developer tools or utilities, what would they be? Please list in shopping list form:

  • $25 SuperMerge (link)
  • $49 MegaGridPro (link)

Note: I'm looking for products which are for sale here, so please don't list free software. And, no, donating to an open source project doesn't make it non-free, at least for this question.

If your tools are specific for a certain type of development (e.g. web development on LAMP, .NET WPF, embedded databases for Amiga, etc.) then include it in your answer. Some tools, like merge, apply to pretty much everyone, though.

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$150 isn't much - you must work for our accounts dept! – Dan Diplo Aug 28 at 20:23

23 Answers

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Either a second (or third) display, or a nice keyboard.

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vote up 13 vote down

$50 Beyond Compare

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BC is the stuff. – David Grant Aug 16 at 5:13
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Beyond Compare ($50) http://www.scootersoftware.com/index.php

I honestly can't think of anything else. $150 is not much. Anything worthwhile is going to cost a lot more than that, or be free. Maybe you can splurge on a nice mouse and mousepad, or an Ethernet hub.

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vote up 0 vote down

Its a bit vague - developer tools for what language? are you a DBA? A Web developer? .Net? Java?

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I'm a PHP developer on a Mac, so I use these:

  • Transmit - $30. FTP client.
  • TextMate - $59. All-around good text editor with hundreds of plug-in bundles available for things like PHP development, blogging, and editing markdown, among plenty of other things.
  • OmniFocus - $80. Pricey for a to-do list app, to be sure, but it's great for keeping track of the lists of bugs and changes that inevitably wind up cluttering note pads and white boards.

A little over $150, I know, but still worth it.

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Isn't TextMate 60 english pounds? ;-) – webmat Sep 19 '08 at 11:34
I actually really liked TextMate when I was using my MacBook... as for price, I can't remember, but I seriously don't think I would have liked it enough to pay that much for it... But never know, I've been known to do crazy things before. – Matthew Scharley Oct 26 '08 at 11:24
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$99 Refactor Pro (Visual Studio add-in)

$32 MS Natural Ergo Keyboard 4000

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-1 for that keyboard *can't stand curves due to the way i type), +2 for coderush. Coding environment improvement without the annoyances of resharper... – RCIX Jul 27 at 7:05
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undeniably, absolutely, and categorically

  • €114 a personal license for Resharper, the c# edition

I really couldn't live without it

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vote up 6 vote down

$149 - Resharper 4.0 C# Personal Edition http://www.jetbrains.com/resharper/buy/index.jsp

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why not ReSharper 4.5? :) – Ilya Ryzhenkov Aug 25 at 20:13
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Conflunce is a great addition to a team/company. I use it to * track projects * report status of dev * report on R&D effort and what we learn * build FAQ * document Database

if you have 8 developers, it is about the price you you have per developer.

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vote up 4 vote down

Assuming you are a C# or VB.NET developer, my choice would be ReSharper. Makes refactoring a breeze, keeps your codebase nice and clean, enforces good coding standards, and makes unit testing fun. Definitely the most bang for your buck in the developer tool world.

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vote up 4 vote down

(obligatory) 40 12-packs of mountain dew http://www.peapod.com

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vote up 1 vote down

I second Omnifocus on the Mac, or any of the "Getting Things Done" packages on Windows (what's a good one?)

It really does work nicely to assist in getting your project done smoothly.

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vote up 0 vote down

My two most indispensable tools:

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vote up 3 vote down
  • $35 - E-Texteditor
    • this may not be neccessary if all you're coding is C# or Java and then you can use VS or Eclipse, but for rails or PHP it kicks ass
  • $50 - Beyond Compare
    • Beyond compare is the business. They haven't updated it in years and it still beats the pants off every other diff/merge app

Spend the rest on coffee

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vote up 0 vote down

I have been using aggiorno and JQuery a lot lately, specially now that I am doing some freelance work on a ASP.NET MVC-based website, and had been doing a lot of XHTML code manually.

Aggiorno is a little add-in for Visual Studio that kind of refactors XHTML into compliance markup and automates some really time-consuming tasks like extracting the inline CSS and adding alt text to images in bulk, among other stuff.

And JQuery, well everyone knows JQuery.

The web app that I am working on right now has over 50 unique pages and some templates, combining the public and admin site, and between this two tools I have saved lots of hours from making things manually.

Cheers!

*Disclaimer: I work for the company that makes aggiorno, but please don't treat this as an ad... It really has boost my productivity in my freelance world, even as it hasn't been finally released yet.

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Looked at it, but pricey! – ovalsquare Sep 25 '08 at 6:49
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+1 for Beyond Compare...

but Orion-Edwards, they did just update it (actually, it's in beta, now).

Since I've already spent my money on Resharper, Beyond Compare, and VisualSVN (which would be the first three on my list), I guess I'd spend my next $150 on NDepends.

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vote up 3 vote down

Hardware counts as a developer tool, right? :-D

...or for $10 more:

I have 2 of the WD Raptor 10K rpm drives in a RAID 0 here at work and my machine compiles very fast.

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vote up 0 vote down

Another nice tool that I like: Total Commander ($38)

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vote up 5 vote down
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vote up 1 vote down

As a user of Free Software... paying for Software seems so 80s... or 90s.... Even on windows I can get perfect (well for my needs) software at zero-usd, and sometime they even are Free (GPL etc) software.

When I run linux - I still have not find any good product that is worth paying for. All open source/FOSS software on linux kick ass (maybe Opera is "good", but still it cannot compete with Firefox+Firebux).

On windows... I would say Total Commander. Yes, never seen such a fine product, I often use it under wine. Now a days, I use Dolphin which works quite fine for me.

So, unless it's HW, and for 150USD you cannot buy much HW, I would spend it on beer. Does it count as a developer tool? :)

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vote up 0 vote down
  1. Visual Assist

  2. 2nd Monitor

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vote up 1 vote down

I can't imagine nobody's mentioned CodeRush and Refactor! yet. I really coudn't live without them!

It's a bit more than $150, but definately worth the extra buck!

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vote up 0 vote down

Gallons of redbull

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