![coda 2 php debugging coda 2 php debugging](https://blogalhost.files.wordpress.com/2011/03/highlight.png)
Recently I have been working on client projects with Git and have been slowing migrating my premium plugins over to Git repositories. I gave up and installed Cornerstone as my dedicated SVN client.
![coda 2 php debugging coda 2 php debugging](https://tommcfarlin.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/terminal-in-coda-2-1024x794.png)
It made me hate committing, tagging and releasing my plugins. It just wasn’t that good, not fully featured and clunky. At that time SVN and all things command line were a mystery so knowing that Coda had SVN support was a relief. Version ControlĪfter getting into WordPress plugin development I had to learn and use the version control system Subversion in order to release plugins on the repository.
CODA 2 PHP DEBUGGING FULL
It is a full Integrated Development environment whereas Coda is a somewhat glorified text editor that doesn’t perform well in numerous areas. PHPStorm reminds my of the completeness of Visual Studio. In a previous life I was an ASP.NET developer programming in C# using Visual Studio. After some recent onsite client worked I was introduced to PHPStorm. It suited my needs and completed the developer feel on my Mac.įast forward to 2013 and I have almost completely stopped opening Coda2. Eventually I got used to it and upgraded to Coda2. But I stuck with it because I knew it was popular and must be good, a little like how a teenager feels about beer the first few times. In hindsight, I did not get on that well with Coda and found myself yearning for NotePad++. When I purchased my MacBook Pro my replacement was the fashionable Coda. Up until 2009 BM (Before Mac) I used NotePad++ which is a great, lightweight text editor with FTP functionality. Why I Changed My Code Editor JanuUncategorizedįor as long as I have been developing with WordPress and PHP I have used a code editor that has had good FTP support for uploading files to my servers.