9

i feel like i'm going back to the stone age.

how do i relearn to develop without intellisense (pydev intellisense doesn't count).. in general, how does one successfully leave the comfort of visual studio ?

5
  • I can't stand doing anything without intellisense now lol
    – Cyclone
    Dec 3, 2009 at 22:05
  • 5
    Wow, you really rely on intellisense that much? That is a bad sign... Dec 3, 2009 at 22:21
  • 12
    Don't be so hard on billy r. If you always work in visual studio (like many do) where intellisense is always available, you'll get used to it. You could just use notepad, and be a "better" developer, but you haven't won that much. Don't feel shameful about using features available to you. Getting "addicted" to intellisense is rarely a voluntary thing. Now I do completely agree that you should be able to cope without it. It's a matter of just DOING IT. :D Dec 4, 2009 at 0:57
  • 2
    Just want to point out that PyCharm IDE has great intellisense support for Python. Although as a dynamically typed lanugage it has limits (it doesnt know what type a function parameters are for example). I agree that after using VS for 10+ years it is a tough adjustment to go without intellisense.
    – Greg Ennis
    Apr 2, 2014 at 18:53
  • @Cyclone: you can use any editor which supports jedi to get great autocompletion (eg. vim with YouCompleteMe) Aug 10, 2016 at 21:29

16 Answers 16

7

I recently learned python with a strong C# background.

My advise: Just do it. Sorry, couldn't resist but I'm also serious. Install python and read: Python.org documentation (v2.6). A book might help too -- I like the Python PhraseBook. From there, I started using python to implement solutions for various things. Most notably, ProjectEuler.net questions.

It forced me to consider the languages and built in data structures.

Python is truly easy to use and intuitive. To learn the basics, took me about an hour. To get pretty good with it, took around 5 hours. Of course, there is always more to learn.

Also, I want to note that I would discourage using IronPython or Jython because I feel learning core, regular python is the first step.

2
  • Learning all the tools in the Standard Library: that might take several days or weeks, depending on what you need to get done. Dec 3, 2009 at 22:25
  • Pretty good within 5 hours? Jeez I am going on a couple years and Ill only admit to being 'okay'. Dec 4, 2009 at 13:41
7

Python has rich "introspection" features. In particular, you can find out a lot about built-in features using a command called help() from the Python command line.

Suppose you want to use regular expressions, and want to find out how to use them.

>>> import re
>>> help(re)

You get a nice display of information, automatically shown to you a page at a time (hit the space bar to see the next page).

If you already know you want to use the sub() function from the re module, you can get help on just that:

>>> help(re.sub)

And this help() feature will even work on your own code, as long as you define Python docstrings for your modules, classes, and functions.

You can enable features in the vim editor (or gvim, or vim for Windows) that enable an "IntelliSense"-like autocompletion feature, and you can use Exuberant Ctags to generate hyperlink "tags" to let you navigate quickly through your code. These turn vim into something that is roughly as powerful as an IDE, with the full power of vim for editing. (There isn't an explicit refactoring tool built in to vim, but there are options available.

And as others have noted, you can get IDEs for Python too. I've used the Wingware IDE, and I recommend it. I try to do most of my work with free, open-source software, but that is one piece of proprietary software I would be willing to buy. I have also used Eclipse with the Pydev plugin (I used its refactoring tool and it worked fine).

P.S. Python has a richer feature set than C#, albeit at the cost that your code won't run as fast. Once you get used to Python, you won't feel like you are in the stone age anymore.

1
  • Absolutely. This also encourages you to write code interactively, which can be a good source of test code later... Dec 4, 2009 at 1:49
5

One step at a time?

Start off with simple programs (things you can write with your eyes closed in C#), and keep going... You will end up knowing the API by heart.

1
  • Great statement! Yes, the more you learn about Python by looking over its documentation of the standard library, the more you will commit to memory. You will know it by heart with enough practice in the language. Dec 3, 2009 at 22:22
3

<rant>

This is sort of the reason that I think being a good visual studio user makes you a bad developer. Instead of learning an API, you look in the object browser until you find something that sounds more or less like what you are looking for, instantiate it, then hit . and start looking for what sounds like the right thing to use. While this is very quick, it also means it takes forever to learn an API in any depth, which often means you end up either re-inventing the wheel (because the wheel is buried under a mountain worth of household appliances and you had no idea it was there), or just doing things in a sub-optimal way. Just because you can find A solution quickly, doesn't mean it is THE BEST solution.

</rant>

In the case of .NET, which ships with about a billion APIs for everything under the sun, this is actually preferred. You need to sift through a lot of noise to find what you are aiming for.

Pythonic code favors one, obvious way to do any given thing. This tends to make the APIs very straight forward and readable. The trick is to learn the language and learn the APIs. It is not terribly hard to do, especially in the case of python, and while not being able to rely on intellisense may be jarring at first, it shouldn't take more then a week or two before you get used to it not being there.

Learn the language and the basic standard libraries with a good book. When it comes to a new library API, I find the REPL and some exploratory coding can get me to a pretty good understanding of what is going on fairly quickly.

2
  • 4
    -1 For your rant. Many .net Developers learn and understand the API. Many more learn the overall intent of the framework, and will be able to infer the likely location of the API they wish to use.
    – Gregory
    Dec 4, 2009 at 1:02
  • 1
    I am talking from personal experience, so maybe this just applies to me. 3 years of .net vs a year of ruby. I can do a hell of a lot on .net, but there are only a few areas I know to any depth. By contrast, I know a lot fewer ruby libraries and APIs, but what I know I really know well. When it comes to banging stuff out, I find I am a lot faster using the MS stack, when it comes to actually gaining expertise, I find that comes easier with the ruby stuff. After thinking about it for awhile, I came down to tooling being the main reason. Dec 4, 2009 at 15:15
2

You could always start with IronPython and continue to develop in Visual Studio.

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  • as long as you eventually get out and venture into Cpython. Dec 4, 2009 at 0:53
  • 1
    Visual Studio is terrible for IronPython :(
    – orip
    Dec 4, 2009 at 13:45
2

The python ide from wingware is pretty nice. Thats what I ended up using going from visual studio C++/.net to doing python.

1

Don't worry about intellisense. Python is really simple and there really isn't that much to know, so after a few projects you'll be conceiving of python code while driving, eating, etc., without really even trying. Plus, python's built in text editor (IDLE) has a wimpy version of intellisense that has always been more than sufficient for my purposes. If you ever go blank and want to know what methods/properties and object has, just type this in an interactive session:

dir(myobject)

1

Same way you do anything else that doesn't have IntelliStuff.

I'm betting you wrote that question without the aid of an IntelliEnglish computer program that showed you a list of verbs you could use and automatically added punctuation at the end of your sentences, for example. :-)

1

I use Eclipse and PyDev, most of the time, and the limited auto-completion help that it provides is pretty useful.

It's not ever going to come up to the level of VS's IntelliSense, and it can't, because of the dynamic nature of Python. But there are compensations, big ones.

The biggest is the breaking of the code-compile-test cycle. It's so easy to write and test prototype code in IDLE that very often it's where I go first: I'll sketch out and test a couple of methods that have to interoperate, figure out that there's something I don't know, learn it, fix my test, and then port the whole thing over to PyDev and watch it work the first time.

Another is that it's a lot simpler. It's really important to know what the standard modules are, and what they do, but for the most part that can be picked up with a little reading. I only use a small handful of modules in my everyday programming - itertools, os, csv (yeah, well), datetime, StringIO - and everything else is there if I need it, but usually I don't.

The stuff that it's really important to know is stuff that IntelliSense couldn't help you with anyway. Auto-completion isn't going to make

self.__dict__.update(kwargs)

make a damn bit of sense; you have to learn what an amazing line of code that is, and why you'd write it, by yourself.

Then you'll think, "how would I even begin to implement something like that in C#?" and realize that the tools these stone-age people are using are a little more sophisticated than you think.

1

A mistake people coming from C# or Java make a lot is recreate a large class hierarchy like is common in those languages. With Python this is almost never useful. Instead, learn about duck typing. And don't worry too much about the lack of static typing: in practice, it's almost never an issue.

0

I'm not too familiar with Python so I'll give some general advice. Make sure to print out some reference pages of common functions. Keep them by you(or pinned to a wall or desk) at all times when your programming.. I'm traditionally a "stone age" developer and after developing in VS for a few months I'm finding my hobby programming is difficult without intellisense.. but keep at it to memorize the most common functions and eventually it'll just be natural

You'll also have to get use to a bit more "difficult" of debugging(not sure how that works with python)

While your learning though, you should enjoy the goodness(at least compared to C#) of Python even if you don't have intellisense.. hopefully this will motivate you!

0

I've only ever used IDLE for python development and it is not fun in the least. I would recommend getting your favorite text editor, mine is notepad++, and praying for a decent plugin for it. I only ever had to go from Eclipse to Visual Studio so my opinions are generally invalid in these contexts.

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  • If you think in the language and the standard library that you have memorized, it is not difficult in the least to program in (IDLE). Dec 3, 2009 at 22:23
  • I didnt say it was hard I just said it was not fun :)
    – Woot4Moo
    Dec 3, 2009 at 23:07
0

Pyscripter does a reasonable job at auto-completion/intellisense. I've been using it recently as I started to learn Python/Django, where I've been mainly a C# developer for the last few years.

0

I suggest going cold turkey - languages like Python shine with great text editors. Choose one you want to become amazing at (vim, emacs, etc.) and never look back.

0

I use Komodo Edit and it does reasonably good guessing at the autocompletion.

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  • 1
    Seconded. I would also second the comments above that suggest keeping a console window open (or one in Komodo) to inspect classes and objects.
    – Tom
    Dec 4, 2009 at 0:47
0

Others have suggested several editors that have intellisense-like capabilities. Try them out.

Also install ipython and use that to learn the language interactively. It is like a souped up version of the regular python interactive shell with lots and lots of added capabilities, and one of the most useful it its extensive context sensitive tab-completion and help.

For example if you type

import r<tab>

it will show all the modules you can import starting with r

import re
re.<tab>

will show all the objects in the re module

re.compile?

will show the docstring and other information about the re.compile function, automatically piping it through a pager if it is longer than a screenful.

re.compile??

will show the source code as well, if available.

Using this I find it is much faster to switch to ipython and query objects directly than it is to look up anything in the docs. You have access to the usual python help() system as well.

ipython has lots and lots of other features - far too many to cover in a short post.

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