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What software products do you use at work that cost money and are totally worth it? Anything from dirt cheap (regex buddy) to expensive (Rational Purify). I'm at windows shop. My manager asked me what tools we might need next year.

Anything from development related tools, to productivity tools, to software that just makes you happy. We already have MSDN.

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I should raise RegexBuddy's price! :-) – Jan Goyvaerts Jan 24 at 5:54
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68 Answers

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An issue tracker such as FogBugz or Jira.

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Visit Scott Hanselman's

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Link should point to hanselman.com/tools . The above is the '07 list, which has been superseded by the '09 list. – Gabe Moothart Sep 9 at 13:24
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Everything you get with an MSDN subscription.

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One of my favorites is Beyond Compare It is a very fast and feature rich file and folder comparison tool, including 3-way merge and compare.

I can't imagine developing on the windows platform without it.

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Perforce source control

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  • Visual Studio 2008
  • Microsoft TFS
  • Resharper
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Resharper addin to Visual Studio

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Once you go Resharper you never go back. – kjgilla Jun 25 at 1:51
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For the upper end of the scale, I'd love to be in a position to use Coverity.

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Resharper

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TextMate and TaskPaper

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How will Textmate help him in a windows shop ? – ldigas Jul 8 at 22:03
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Microsoft Visual Studio - integrated development environment

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I've looked at a lot of free IDEs, and none of them come close to comparing to VS.Net. – Kibbee Nov 9 '08 at 2:14
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If he has MSDN, then he already has VS, it's included. – Bratch Nov 12 '08 at 1:23
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I use an addin for Visual Studio called Visual Assist X (wholetomato.com). It does a much better job at auto-completion than the default Intellisense. It also does refactoring and extra syntax highlighting.

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DevExpress especially the winforms Grid control

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A profiler appropriate for the language you use, such as Ants Profiler Pro: http://www.componentsource.com/products/red-gate-ants-profiler-pro/index-gbp.html

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CALM, fine-grained application monitoring and unhandled-exception trapping for .NET

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SQL compare from Red Gate for comparing and synchronizing DB Schemas

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http://www.automuter.com/

To prevent colleagues who listen to music leaving their headphones blaring when they wander away from their computer.

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BBEdit

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{SmartAssembly} for assembly protection/obfuscation. SourceGear's Vault for source control.

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010 Editor - a binary file viewer and editor. It supports very flexible configuration (almost programming) of structured binary file formats.

Faststone Capture - very nice and easy to use screen shot software

Xplorer2 - replacement for Windows Explorer. I guess everyone has their own favorite "Norton Commander clone". Mine is Xplorer2.

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In a situation like yours, i.e. finding out what tools should be budgeted for next year, the best approach is:

  1. Examine how your shop is developing software

  2. Identify the "pain points" in the way your shop develops software (for example: "Source code control is a pain," "Deployment to production is a pain," etc)

  3. Focus on the tools that will be useful and then prepare a list. Don't waste your time an money on anything that is not a pain point.

With the list in your hand, you can repeat your question in a more useful fashion, for example: "What deployment tool is worth buying for a Windows shop?"

Good luck!

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DisKeeper for defrag..

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TextMate and Transmit. They're worth every single penny.

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Compare & Merge, a visual text diff util. Very simple to use, just two editors with color coded diffs. Change any line and the diffs get updated in real time. I like the clean user interface, it is our default diff tool for TortoiseSVN.

It can also compare directories but I rarely need that.

http://compareandmerge.com/

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I strongly, strongly suggest using Subversion for source control over anything provided by Microsoft. I know of several very large MS shops using it. Best of all, it's free and with Tortoise (also free) there's great integration for Windows and Visual Studio!

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cant buy free stuff? ;( – Daniel T. Magnusson Jul 8 at 21:57
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I do a lot of demos for the sales force and I couldn't live without Camtasia. It makes demo creation and editing very easy.

Almost everything else is free, either GPL'ed or created by my employer IBM, so there's a lot of software we get to use without paying.

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eTextEditor or Sublime Text

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UltraMon if you have multiple monitors

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Serious guys consider Linux! Cost: $0

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we develop software for real people :) – Dustin Getz Nov 8 '08 at 16:34
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Development platform and target platform DO NOT HAVE TO BE THE SAME. But hey, make sure you listen to the Microsoft salesman. – Ali A Nov 9 '08 at 17:41
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