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I have been programming for 20 years. Many things changed since I wrote my first BASIC lines. Now we have IDEs, frameworks, debuggers, profilers, versioning tools and many other helpful toys.

So which developments in the past 10 years have made programming easier? And what was necessary to sacrifice for it?

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Any IDE with auto-completion :-)

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im pretty sure crutches have been around for hundreds of years... – theman_on_vista Mar 10 at 16:43
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the wheel has been around for longer -- stop being lazy and just walk everywhere! – jonstjohn Mar 10 at 19:07
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@Bratch, a broken leg and not knowing common libraries are two different things. While CC is a nice feature, one should be able to work without their favorite IDE. Both the 'crutches' and 'broken leg' arguments are straw men, imho. – Tim Post Mar 12 at 16:50
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It's just an attempted analogy about making things easier. Many of us can work without an IDE, but this is about making it easier, and in many cases faster, which is not always better, as Petzold makes very clear. – Bratch Mar 18 at 20:11
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Before I had an IDE with autocompletion. Now I have a "dynamic" language that makes it impossible. We get quite a bit of autocomplete anyway, but it's not like with a static and statically-typed lang. – yar Aug 10 at 20:02
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Garbage collection.

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While the whole concept of Garbage collection has existed for more than 10 years, It was really within the last 10 years that using garbage collected languages really got popular. – Kibbee Mar 10 at 14:56
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Stackoverflow

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Brown-noser :-) – Les Mar 10 at 18:52
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Nah, for the time waster SO is, I wouldn't give it so much credit ;) – Pop Catalin Mar 10 at 19:00
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Eclipse IDE.

Had to sacrifice: Vim keyboard commands.

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You should check Eclim out: eclim.sourceforge.net – Jonas Mar 10 at 15:36
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Color screens :)

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Bah... two colors is enough! Black and amber! – Spoike Mar 11 at 9:31
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Debugging environments that support edit & continue.

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Edit And Continue.

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The Internet.

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Google is not the internet. Pfffft. Lol! – oxbow_lakes Mar 10 at 23:58
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If google has the power to blacklist the whole of the internet (itself included), then I would contend that google IS the internet. – Kyle Trauberman Mar 11 at 4:37
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www.google.com

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Google (well, the internet in general, but mostly Google)

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The Internet. It allows us to find information on how to do things a lot easier. It also makes sharing libraries easier (think CPAN for perl).

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The internet - makes it a lot easier to find answers to questions.

I'd add open source to the list too, as open source projects have provided lots of great tools that developers can use out of the box for free to do many complex tasks.

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I'm going to go with a refinement of the software development process.

Moving from process models such as the waterfall model to newer methods like an agile/iterative approach have made software development much easier.

Probably the biggest sacrifice of these new processes is a harder to determine code complete date.

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IntelliSense and autocompletion (making it easier to use more descriptive names for classes / variables ... )

Unit-tests (having some kind of permanent test-suite, making it easier to refactor code)

Static code analysis tools

ORM tools and DI containers

As noted before; the Internet and the vast resources that can be found on it. (MSDN, blogs, articles on The Code Project, ... )

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intellisense.

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Unit test frameworks and mocking. In order to effectively benefit from it you have to sacrifice "code-like-hell programming" and invest time and effort in disciplined test writing. I could go back to using VI and separate shells to compile in instead of an IDE, but I wouldn't give up unit testing.

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Source control. Sure source control existed for much longer, but the advancement of source control systems with things like SVN, Git, and others have really helped make things a lot easier. Source control was much worse when all we had was CVS and SourceSafe.

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CVS wasn't that bad, within its limitations. SVN is a better CVS, but not stupendously better. Distributed VCSs, like Git, do seem to be newer than ten years, and are much better. – David Thornley Mar 11 at 21:10
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Very little has made software development easier. The technology is certainly much better, but the difficulties are still due to communication and social issues. Those haven't changed.

It's certainly a joy to not have to worry about every byte, and who doesn't love dual flat-screen color monitors?

I think the scale of the problems have expanded to the limits allowed by all those technical improvements, so the cutting edge problems still seem hard.

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Red Bull - it gives you wings.

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Yes! Although before that there was Jolt. – sk Mar 10 at 15:16
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before Jolt, Mountain Dew – jonstjohn Mar 10 at 15:28
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And before all of them... coffee :) – Sakkle Mar 10 at 15:35
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Moore's Law

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  • Stepping/Breaking into code
  • IntelliSense
  • Improved GUI Interface
  • .NET Framework
  • Internet (HTML/ASP.NET/PHP etc)
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All but one of those (.NET Framework) were around more than 10 years ago. – Robert S. Mar 10 at 17:07
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I would argue that the .NET framework is just a refinement of Java. – cdmckay Mar 10 at 20:47
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Version control. Without it I wouldn't be able to tele-develop, and the open source community would probably not exist.

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punch cards! :)

oh, wait. maybe not.

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High-Level programming languages

  • LINQ ~ 2007
  • F# ~ 2005
  • C# ~ 2001
  • Python 2.0 ~ 2000 (I say 2.0 because the language began to gain ground here)
  • CSS ~ 1996
  • Ruby ~ 1995

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    Those have existed an been used for more than 50 years now, ever since Lisp (1959). – Jörg W Mittag Mar 10 at 16:38
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    CSS isn't a programming language: it's some kind of voodoo... ;-) – peSHIr Apr 21 at 20:03
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    I think a big step forward was:

    • syntax highlighting
    • code completion
    • educational tools like ReSharper
    • Internet
      • online examples
      • online documentations
      • newsgroups
      • download of libraries
      • etc.
    • powerful IDEs
    • powerful debuggers
    • frameworks and access to them (see Internet)
    • 10 more years of experience in software-development
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    Greater acceptance/use of continuous integration.

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    OO. And, largely as a consequence, libraries. We had them before, but now they are far more powerful.

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    Jon Skeet ;)

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    Higher-level languages like Ruby and Python.

    To take advantage of them we had to give up our perfectionist control on memory, performance, etc. and accept that higher-level languages cut down on the time it takes to make the damn thing work.

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