48
votes

I'm a PHP developer and now I use Notepad++ for code editing, but lately I've been searching for an IDE to ease my work.

I've looked into Eclipse, Aptana Studio and several others, but I'm not really decided, they all look nice enough but a bit complicated. I'm sure it'll all get easy once I get used to it, but I don't want to waste my time.

This is what I'm looking for:

  • FTP support
  • Code highlight
  • SVN support would be great
  • Ruby and JavaScript would be great
0

40 Answers 40

70
votes

For PHP I would recommend PhpStorm.

It supports FTP/SFTP synchronization, integrates well with Subversion, CVS, Mercurial and even with Git. Also, it supports HTML, CSS, JavaScript and handles language-mixing well like SQL or HTML blocks inside PHP code, JSON, etc.

But if you need Ruby you can try another IDE - RubyMine with same capabilities but for Ruby.

2
  • Just a note - PHPStorm costs $99 for a license
    – Kyle
    Sep 16, 2011 at 14:48
  • Does it come with a debug tool?
    – Michiel
    Feb 23, 2012 at 14:36
50
votes

NetBeans. Check out 7.0.1.

It supports FTP/SFTP synchronization, integrates well with Subversion, CVS, Mercurial and even with Git (with plugin). Also, it supports HTML, CSS, JavaScript, popular frameworks and more.

And its free.

0
33
votes

Too bad no one mentioned phpDesigner. It's really the best IDE I've came across (and I believe I've tried them all).

The main pro of this one is that it's NOT Java based. This keeps the whole thing quick.

Features:

  • Intelligent Syntax Highlighter - automatic switch between PHP, HTML, CSS, and JavaScript depending on your position!
  • PHP (both version 4 and 5 are supported)
  • SQL (MySQL, MSSQL 2000, MSSQL 7, Ingres, Interbase 6, Oracle, Sybase)
  • HTML/XHTML
  • CSS (both version 1 and 2.1 are supported)
  • JavaScript
  • VBScript
  • Java
  • C#
  • Perl
  • Python
  • Ruby
  • Smarty

PHP:

  • Support for both PHP 4 and PHP 5
  • Code Explorer for PHP (includes, classes, extended classes, interfaces, properties, functions, constants and variables)
  • Code Completion (IntelliSense) for PHP - code assist as you type
  • Code Tip (code hint) for PHP - code assist as you type
  • Work with any PHP frameworks (access classes, functions, variables, etc. on the fly)
  • PHP object oriented programming (OOP) including nested objects
  • Support for PHP heredoc
  • Enclose strings with single- or double quotes, linefeed, carriage return or tabs
  • PHP server variables
  • PHP statement templates (if, else, then, while…)
  • Powerful PHP Code Beautifier with many configurations and profile support
  • phpDocumentor wizard
  • Add phpDocumentor documentation to functions and classes with one click!
  • phpDocumentor tags
  • Comment or uncomment with one click!
  • Jump to any declaration with filtering by classes, interfaces, functions, variables or constants

Debug (PHP):

  • Debug with Xdebug
  • Breakpoints
  • Step by step debugging
  • Step into
  • Step over
  • Run to cursor
  • Run until return
  • Call stack
  • Watches
  • Context variables
  • Evaluate
  • Profiling
  • Multiple sessions
  • Evaluation tip
  • Catch errors
3
  • But.... No remote debugging! Some of the most needed features if you must debug some bigger projectd or a CMS system running on a server.
    – devarni
    Mar 11, 2009 at 21:08
  • 1
    PHPDesigner is awesome, I actually paid for it. I used it until I switched to linux.
    – Josiah
    Jan 7, 2010 at 1:33
  • 7
    What makes PHPDesigner better than PhpStorm? You mentioned that you've tried them all... thanks... Aug 17, 2011 at 23:04
20
votes

Are you sure you're looking for an IDE? The features you're describing, along with the impression of being too complicated that you got from e.g. Aptana, suggest that perhaps all you really want is a good editor with syntax highlighting and integration with some common workflow tools. For this, there are tons of options.

I've used jEdit on several platforms successfully, and that alone puts it above most of the rest (many of the IDEs are cross-platform too, but Aptana and anything Eclipse-based is going to be pretty heavy-weight, if full-featured). jEdit has ready-made plugins for everything on your list, and syntax highlighting for a wide range of languages. You can also bring up a shell in the bottom of your window, invoke scripts from within the editor, and so forth. It's not perfect (the UI is better than most Java UIs, but not perfect yet I don't think), but I've had good luck with it, and it'll be a hell of a lot simpler than Aptana/Eclipse.

That said, I do like Aptana quite a bit for web development, it does a lot of the grunt work for you once you're over the learning curve.

1
  • You might be right. I thing I've used the term IDE in a rather extended meaning... Though some IDE specific features interest me (a debugger would be nice, some variable tracking also, etc)
    – Brayn
    Sep 22, 2008 at 17:52
18
votes

Eclipse PDT is very nice.

2
  • ya but very slow at times! :( Apr 8, 2011 at 19:51
  • PDT has been neglected for quite some time since Eclipse 3.7 release. However it looks like Zend has picked up the slack and is now maintaining PDT. code.google.com/p/zend-sdk Netbeans does not support Namespaces. Eclipse is multi-platform and can do almost anything you'd ever need. If all your gonna do is PHP dev, its fast.
    – rynop
    Nov 6, 2011 at 4:06
14
votes

I'm always amazed that more people don't use ActiveState Komodo.

It has the best debugging facilities of any PHP IDE I have tried, is a very mature product and has more useful features than you can shake a stick at. Of note, it has a fantastic HTTP inspector, Javascript debugger and Regular Expression Toolkit. You can get it so that it steps through your PHP, then you see your Javascript running, and then see your HTTP traffic going out over the wire!

It also comes in free (Komodo Edit) and open (OpenKomodo versions).

Oh, and if you don't always hack just on PHP, it's designed as a multi-language editor and rocks for Ruby and Python too.

I've been a happy customer for around 5 years.

1
  • could be price right?? is almost 100 box more expensive than phpdesigner and phpstorm... phpdesigner can be a good option cheaper than the other two... I'm .net developer and I'm searching a good IDE for a php project BTW...
    – ncubica
    Sep 7, 2011 at 15:36
6
votes

There's no "best" IDE, only better and worse ones.

Right now I'm trying to settle in with Aptana. It has a lot of cruft that I don't want, like "Jaxer" doodads all over the place. It's reasonably fast, but chokes on large files when syntax highliting is on. I have not been able to figure out how to set up PHP debugging. Three good things about Aptana: easy plugin installations, very fast and intuitive Subversion plugins, ligning fast file search.

I tried Eclipse PDT and Zend for Eclipse, but they have nightmare levels of interface cruft. Installing plugins is a living horror of version mismatches and cryptic error messages.

I also use Komodo (they bought us licenses at work). Komodo has a very intuitive interface, but is ridiculously slow, chokes on medium sized files with syntax highlighting. File search is intuitive, but rather slow. Subversion integration is not that great - slow and buggy. If not for slowness, I would have probably stuck with Komodo, especially for the debugger.

6
votes

To get you started, here is a list of PHP Editors (Wikipedia).

5
votes

For PHP in particular, PHPEdit is the best, and I tried and worked in some of them including, Dreamweaver, Elipse, Emacs, Notepad++, NetBeans, UltraEdit ...

5
votes

Geany is a great lightweight editor -- like Notepad++ for Linux, only better. I find this, combined with a few shell scripts and symlinks for linking modules into a web source tree, make developing on Linux easy and fun.

3
  • +1 for Geany. There is actually a Windows version of Geany, and it works great.
    – gen_Eric
    Aug 31, 2010 at 14:15
  • +1. Geany is surprisingly awesome.
    – TyrantWave
    Feb 11, 2011 at 9:26
  • The best text editor for Linux. Feb 16, 2012 at 7:36
3
votes

http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/opensource/library/os-php-ide/index.html

Personally, I love Notepad++... :D . The above link compares some of the better IDEs and the best ones aren't free.

I'd recommend Komodo 4.4 though (I used the trial version) since it was awesome. Better than Notepad++, but not free... :(

4
  • 1
    Notepad ++ is a pretty good text editor, but it is not an IDE
    – Kibbee
    Sep 22, 2008 at 17:40
  • Only because it doesn't have built-in debugging and/or compiling features... :(... The rest of its functionality is comparable with most IDEs though... :P
    – apandit
    Sep 22, 2008 at 17:42
  • Notepad++ is really robust and light. Perfect for most of my coding. Though now I'm looking for something more elaborated.
    – Brayn
    Sep 22, 2008 at 17:44
  • Notepad++ is the only way I work with PHP. IDEs are great and all, but for getting things done Notepad++ is a winner. Oct 2, 2008 at 13:35
3
votes

I would recommend Zend IDE for the integrated debugger.

3
votes

I'm using Zend Studio. It has decent syntax highlighting, code completion and such. But the best part is that you can debug PHP code, either with a standalone PHP interpreter, or even on a live web server as you "browse" along your pages. You get the usual Visual Studio keys, breakpoints, watches and call stack, which is almost indispensable for bug hunting. No more "alert()"-cluttered debugged source code :)

1
  • Sorry but Zend Studio IDE is cumbersome, lacks features and Zend is pretty stingy regarding updates. Not recommended.
    – Déjà vu
    Feb 26, 2012 at 13:07
3
votes

Have you looked at Delphi for PHP (<http://www.codegear.com/products/delphi/php>) ?

Joe Stagner of Microsoft really likes Delphi for PHP.
He says it here: "[Delphi for PHP] 2.0 is the REAL DEAL and I LOVE IT !"

2
votes

Eclipse with PDT.

1
  • 1
    Why do you recommend this one? Jun 18, 2009 at 19:13
2
votes

I use and like Rapid PHP.

2
votes

What features of an IDE do you want? Integrated build engine? Debugger? Code highlighting? IntelliSense? Project management? Configuration management? Testing tools? Except for code highlighting, none of these are in your requirements.

So my suggestion is to use an editor that supports plugins, like Notepad++ (which you are already used to). If there's not already a plugin that does what you want, then write one.

I use Coda on Mac OS X.

2
votes

There is a new guy in town, PhpStorm from JetBrains. You use it and I bet you will forget all the other editors. It's bit pricey though, unfortunately.

1
  • I've been using PHPStorm for a while now and it has everything I was looking for.
    – Brayn
    Feb 16, 2011 at 15:05
2
votes

RadPHP (previously known as Delphi for PHP) is the best.

2
votes

All are good, but only Delphi for PHP (RadPHP 3.0) has a designer, drag and drop controls, GUI editeor, huge set of components including Zend Framework, Facebook, database, etc. components. It is the best in town.

RadPHP is the best of all; It has all the features the others have. Its designer is the best of all. You can design your page just like Dreamweaver (more than Dreamweaver).

If you use RadPHP you will feel like using ASP.NET with Visual Studio (but the language is PHP).

It's too bad only a few know about this.

1
vote

Aptana supports this and I use it for all of my web development now.

1
vote

Hands down the best IDE for PHP is NuSphere PHPEd. It's a no contest. It is so good that I use WINE to run it on my Mac. PHPEd has an awesome debugger built into it that can be used with their local webserver (totally automatic) or you can just install the dbg module for XAMPP or any other Apache you want to run.

1
vote

The best IDE for PHP in my opinion is Zend Studio (which itself is based on Eclipse PDT). Note that in this case "best" does not necessarily mean "good." It is slow and a bit buggy, but even so, it's still the best option for PHP programmers. I've tried a ton of PHP editors over the years and I haven't yet found one that works great.

Komodo IDE would be my second choice. My only problem with Komodo is that the autocomplete is not as good. With properly structured apps where you use phpDoc to document return types etc., it should be alright. But I work on a project that doesn't really do that and Komodo can't read across files to know that $user is a User object for example.

1
vote

Personally everything that is based uppon Eclipse or NetBeans is an overkill, the GUI is crap and the performance is soooo slow compared to other alternatives.

If you're willing to pay I would suggest Zend IDE (version 5.5, not 6 because it's based on Eclipse) and EditPlus for a more lightweight yet powerfull code editor.

If you're looking for free alternatives, or if you code in other languages other than PHP, OpenKomodo is a really nice IDE with almost all the features (no SVN neither CVS) that you require, the only con I see about OpenKomodo is that sometimes it messes my code indentation, but then again I don't use it on a very regular basis.

As for a free lightweight alternative: Notepad++. =)

1
vote

My personal preference is Eclipse (with various plug-ins) as I am developing in several languages (PHP, Java, and Ruby) and this way I am always used to interface and keyboard shortcuts. This is not a minor thing as you become very productive this way. I haven't used Aptana, but will (hopefully) soon - it does look interesting, though. For others IDEs I have used: jEdit (for little Java), Notepad++ (still for some scripting and short test code runs). And for the features You asked: Eclipse support many source code version servers (Subclipse); your project can be on a Samba share; ZendDebugger/xdebug for debugging.

0
votes

I've tried Eclipse PDT, with some success. Aptana is also pretty good, or if you are doing a lot of AJAX stuff, it's great. Your mileage may vary, however, depending on what additional plugins you want to use with them.

0
votes

PHPEclipse is as close to Eclipse java power as it could get. Eclipse PDT is much weaker (last time I checked).

0
votes

I'm using PHPDesigner but I will go for Eclipse PDT. I was always against Eclipse until few months ago when I have one Java project to finish... Great IDE

Now I can't imagine one day without Eclipse. :)

0
votes

Have you tried NetBeans 6? Zend Studio and NetBeans 6 are the best IDEs with PHP support you'll come across and NetBeans is free.

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