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With so many open source (or simply freely available) alternatives for nearly every programming tool category, which software do you (or your boss) pay for and why? Is the decision based on saving development time, better functionality, documentation or simply corporate policy?

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I bought VS2005 and VS2008. I also purchased Resharper. I use Tortoise SVN and Unfuddle, which are both free tools. Oh and I also purchased Telerik controls.

  • VS because I've found that nothing has the same functionality for coding c#
  • Resharper because I feel it's helping me to become a better coder.
  • Tortoise SVN because I wasn't happy with Ankh and I didn't necessarily need the VS integration.
  • Unfuddle because 1 project at a time is free
  • Telerik because their controls save me time and there wasn't really a good product that's free.
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What's the point of selecting one answer as "accepted" in a question like this which cannot really have one definitive answer? – Jonik Apr 17 at 15:27
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Visual SVN. Ankh just crashes my VS too much.

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IntelliJ IDEA, which is by far the best Java IDE there is (imho). In particular, it's code completion, refactoring, search capabilities and a whole lot of little touches just put it head and shoulders above any other I've used (Eclipse, Netbeans, JDeveloper and years ago Jbuilder).

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Resharper, because once you get used to it, it makes coding a lot easier and faster. On top of that it greatly increases the refactoring abilities of Visual Studio .Net.

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Beyond Compare. It's just a fantastic compare tool and I couldn't live without it.

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FogBugz. It's just so painless and streamlined compared to free options I've tried such as Trac and Bugzilla.

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TestDriven.NET. The integration with VS is perfect. Note that this is free for personal use.

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I pay for those tools, such as Resharper, FogBugz and the DevExpress suite for which there is simply no good free alternative. I use free tools such as Tortoise SVN or SubSonic if I am sure that they are stable, well supported and will be around for a long time.

Being free is not a particular attraction to me. A free tool actually costs more than all but the most expensive paid tools if it is abandoned in a few years and I have to spend time rewriting software to adapt to this loss.

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I mainly bought the following tools for personal use:

  • Visual Studio Standard 2008 (and the predecessors)
  • ReSharper
  • RegExBuddy

There are no better free variants for those tools, and they support my development work with many productivity tools to be worth the money.

I will buy IntelliJ IDEA as soon as I will have some serious Java projects to do, because I am fed up with various nagging problems in Eclipse.

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I have Versions and a Beanstalk account for version control. Apart from that, everything else I use is free.

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Visual Assist X

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Support for C/C++ – Rasmus Faber Jan 21 '09 at 20:20
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I bought TextMate when I got a mac, one of the best text editors for programmers. I also managed to get two copies bought for $WORK.

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I'll just post the paid ones:

Visual Studio + Team System
ReSharper
Microsoft SQL Server
Kentico CMS

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Only the computer and a copy of Windows. It's actually the company's, not mine, but that's all they've had to pay for my programming. All the tools I use are free/open.

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-1 since your answer to the question asked is: None – Nifle Jan 21 '09 at 18:50
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Red Gate ANTS profiler

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I purchased a license for JungleDisk. It's not a programming tool, but it allows me to sleep better at night, knowing that Amazon will take good care of my Subversion repository backups and other important data of mine.

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RAD Studio (Delphi)

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ViEmu. It's a VI emulation layer for Visual Studio. It rocks!!!

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Total Commander, and if someone ask how it is programming tool, I use it to:

  • diff / merge files
  • compare / synchronize directories
  • deploy using ftp / sftp
  • start / stop servers
  • browse source tree and edit files
  • start / stop services
  • kill / view processes and registry
  • and pretty much everything file related

(add below)

  • Pack/unpack files
  • Peek into a Linux RPM to just view/copy a particular file
  • Mount ISO image
  • Browse Liux / ext partition
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+1 (+1,000,000 if I could). Total Commander is the one productivity-enhancing tool that everyone must have. If you're still using Windows Explorer for your daily tasks, you're wasting A LOT of time. – Ates Goral Jan 21 '09 at 16:59
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For the most part my company will provide any paid tools I need, and for most of the programming I do outside of work I use open source tools. One exception was Enterprise Architect I like it enough that I wanted a personal, rather than company constrained license. (I tried StarUML and ArgoUML but feel like EA is more feature complete.

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CodeRush / Refactor Pro is worth every penny.

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Microsoft related

  • Visual Studio w/ MSDN
  • Expression Studio

Adobe

  • Flex Builder
  • Flash
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Hardware. There just aren't free alternatives to physical hardware, so that's where my money goes to at the moment.

Getting the best software tools, be it free or commercial, is important, but having a good powerful machine for development should not be overlooked -- after all, what good is the newest IDE with code-completion and refactoring tools when those tools take 20 seconds to execute, leading to irritation and decreased produtivity, because the development machine is five years old?

Having a machine with a dual- or quad-core processor with plenty of memory, a fast hard disk and dual-monitor set up is going to be a serious productivity boost, compared to having to fight with a five year old machine which constantly disk swaps due to a lack of memory.

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I bought phpDesigner for PHP-development http://www.mpsoftware.dk/phpdesigner.php

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IntelliJ IDEA.

I've been doing some programming in Groovy and nothing even comes close to IDEA's support for Groovy.

Nowadays, it's even suited for Flex, ActionScript, Python and Scala development.

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books.... unless i can get them online for free

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Quest's TOAD is pretty useful if you do database work. It's pretty fast and has lots of features. There are free alternatives and tools provided by the vendor but this tool has lots of stuff all in one place. The UI is not for the timid, but to use it you need to know how to write SQL, so that's not usually a problem.

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dotTrace - the best profiler for .NET code.

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Balsamiq Mockups. It is an easy-to-use tool for creating mockups.

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My IDE- Intellij IDEA. And yes have tried Eclipse (I had to learn enough of it to support my co-workers who use it). IDEA is just better at navigating large code bases.

Also, although it's not a "programming tool" per se, I would add OSX Leopard to this list. I used to be an avid Linux user, but it was worth the money for me not to have to "administer" my development environment anymore. Some things are just worth paying for.

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