Does anyone know of any good IDE (Code completion, Syntax coloring, etc) that will handle php. Looking for anything that might be relatively cheap or free and doesn't run like crap (IE: Eclipse)
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NetBeans is a nice free editor that has been steadily adding support for languages like Ruby, PHP and Python. I've been using it on a MacBook Pro for Ruby and quite like it. It has the standard IDE features like SCM integration and runs on most platforms. |
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I've used Komodo from ActiveState with some success. I've not needed to go elsewhere. For personal use, this IDE is free. |
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I've been following the NetBeans for PHP project but haven't actually tried it myself. I was impressed with version 6.1's support for Rails though, so if they can do the same with PHP, it'll be a keeper. I use Zend Studio for PHP myself. Gotta pay for that one though. |
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I recommend Crimson Editor. There isn't code completion, but you can download the PHP CHM help file and configure Crimson to launch it and view the documentation for any function with a hotkey. It is a pretty powerful tool. Another editor I've been using lately is E Text Editor, only because it has better FTP support than Crimson. |
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Try Aptana. I use it and love it. Before that I used Textpad with the php syntax definition (try all the PHP syntax definitions until you find one right for you). Don't judge Textpad by it's cover. It's rock solid and really really useful. It has lots of useful addons as well (with room to write your own if you want). Best of all, it's free, and it has excellent macros support (which is a huge thing eclipse is lacking). The reason I switched to Aptana was so that I could automatically upload a file on save (there is a script you have to install to get it to do that) but I just noticed that there is an addon to get Textpad to do that for you... Although Textpad doesn't have tab-auto complete nativly (there is an addon for that too though). |
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I advise against E Text Editor - its syntax highlighting is buggy, its display is buggy and it wants all of cygwin to do anything. I'm using Eclipse and I'm not seeing any performance problems, and it seems rock solid. |
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For all of my web development needs, I use Aptana, which has support for Ruby, Ruby on Rails, Adobe AIR, PHP, (X)HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and a few other things. It ties in nicely with various server software, has FTP (and I think SFTP), CVS and Subversion extensions, and more. However, I have also heard good things about Eclipse for web development, but I only use Eclipse proper for desktop development (C, C++, Java). However, Aptana is built on Eclipse. |
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I like PHPDesigner |
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I also have another vote for Aptana. The application is available as a stand-alone, or as a plug-in for Eclipse. I personally prefer Eclipse with the plug-in because I use it for development in other languages (like Java), but if you're primarily doing web development then Aptana is the way to go. |
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I recommend Notepad++ It's a very powerful solution, open-source and moreover free... I like the new functionnalities like the ftp plugins with the ability to automatically send the file your saving on the ftp : ctrl+s => file save + file sent through network to the associated directory ! |
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I second Komodo from ActiveState. They have Komodo Editor which is their IDE without their some debug and other features. The Editor recently went open which is good but I am not sure if I have seen any benefit as of yet. Version 4.4 just came with the ability to create Zend Framework projects. The 2 Great things about Komodo. |
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DevPHP isn't bad, it's what I currently use at work. Eclipse is also really good. |
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I've heard good things about vs.php which allows you to develop PHP in Visual Studio. There is even a standalone version that does not require a Visual Studio license. It's not free however, but at about about $99 I think it is well worth it if you can harness the power of the frankly superb VS IDE. |
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I currently use Notepad++ but I'm going to try out Komodo again and also give Aptana a shot. |
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As Tom and others have mentioned, free and good -- Eclipse with Aptana plug-in. |
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On the Mac side, my favorite is Coda. It's not free ($79), but it has an elegant interface and rich feature-set (auto-complete, integrated FTP, graphical CSS, collaborative editing). In the free department, I'd have to say TextWrangler, aka BBEdit Lite. Not an IDE, but quite a good text editor with syntax highlighting and so forth. |
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On Linux - Quanta is pretty good. Also Eclipse with PDT or PHPEclipse plugins, disabling automatic building, HTML validation and team functions works well. |
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If you're on a Mac I'd suggest trying out TextMate. It's a free lightweight text editor written by a UNIX guy so there's a fair amount of shell integration and other pretty cool features I haven't seen anywhere else. |
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NetBeans 6.5 beta got native support for PHP -- I'm beginning to like it more than Eclipse with the DPT plugin. |
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I've been running a trial version of Zend Studio, and I'm loving it. It's just like using Eclipse (because it is Eclipse when you get down to it), but it also does static analysis, and puts little "!" icons next to suspect code. I've enjoyed using it, but I'm really not looking forward to buying a license when the trial runs out. |
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I've used PHPDesigner and NetBeans mainly. NetBeans takes a bit of getting used to as the tabbing is a bit wierd but it's an extremely powerful IDE - containing FTP management, DB browsing, CVS and SVN built in grouping everything all together in a project layout. PHPDesigner is perfect for small edits, when you're away from home for example. If you don't need huge packages and are okay with just an editor go for PHPDesigner. |
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I'm using Eclipse with PDT, and I must say I can't really imagine myself using anything else. |
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I am a big fan of Zend Studio (the non-Eclipse-based one). But if you need free, Aptana Studio is quite good and waaaay less clunky than your basic Eclipse install. If you need more clunk, though (CVS, SVN), the Aptana plug-in for Eclipse is pretty good, too. |
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I've used UltraEdit for a long time as my general purpose text/script editor. It has a plugins for syntax highlighting which work well once set up. PHP, Perl, HTML, C, C++ are all supported. It doesn't support code completion. It also has good DIFF tool, FTP/SFTP support, HEX editor, excellent macros, and loads of little features like a column select mode which is great for those odd occasions you need it. NB: It is not free but cheap at around $50 USD |
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There is PHPEdit from Waterproof.fr which is inexpensive and I used it until we switched to Zend Studio. PHPedit is free for non-profit coding, just ask for a personal licence. |
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What do you not like about Eclipse? I used to use JEdit but switched to Eclipse PDT after I realized how easy it makes working on larger projects: time-saving code completion on my own classes and methods, pressing F3 takes you to the function your cursor is on, has useful macro-like things called templates, PHP-Doc macros, put your cursor on a PHP function and press SHIFT-F2 and it takes you to the PHP site and looks up that function. CTRL-SHIFT-F re-indents everything. All these things you constantly use everyday and they just save you lots of time. I made a tutorial showing you how to install Eclipse PDT, Apache 2.2, PHP 5, MySQL 5, and phpMyAdmin in 30 minutes and demonstrate how to use these features: |
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I checked out and have fully switched to Aptana after reading this thread. I'm really loving it so far. |
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I prefer Eclipse with PDT installed. It contains:
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Every time I try to use one of the big IDE things it just seems slow and confusing. My tip for the up and coming developper is to use a simple but useful text editor with syntax highlighting and tab/bracket support (I like Smultron on mac, but there are tons like TextEdit, Notepad++ etc), then use phpXref to browse their code when they need to follow a process. PhpXref is a bunch of perl scripts that ouput an interlinked version of your code, you can search for a function and see where it's defined and where its called. All source code is linked to function, variable etc information. It's pretty easy to run locally, you just add your source to a directory in the phpxref install and hit the perl script, you then have a bunch of html files that explain your code perfectly (phpdoc supported!). This keeps your normal editor as simple as possible (and light, which is nice when you're working on your to do list with the same editor), but gives you the opportunity to dig deeper and do analysis on your code when you need to. Example phpxref (wordpress trunk) Caveat: I work almost exclusively on plugins and themes for the wordpress package, so I have no experience writing my own humonguous applications. P.S. Someone said TextMate is free above but it's not. It's powerful and cool but 70$ is a lot and I find the Free/Open Source Smultron gives you almost all the benefit at 100% less cost. |
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I'm just gonna say no. I've tried out several IDE's and they all have pro and cons for each one. I gave up looking for the "visual studio" of ide's for php |
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