There is a really nice feature that if you hover over a CSS property, you immediately get shown which browsers support that property, naturally this doesn't replace testing but it does mean you can catch stuff as you write it instead of after it has been compiled, uploaded and ran. The first thing you will probably say is that your IDE of choice has all those things, and it probably does (pretty much all the ones I have used recently do) but they have had to be installed after the fact as plugins, never really a huge task but with CodeLobster you don't have to. I really liked how out of the box it came with a lot of stuff, there was the integration with various libraries and frameworks, there was version control, there was build and debug tools - there was a lot, and of course it had your standard slew of features like syntax hilighting and auto-complete. I am not going to list out all the features present in the app, just draw attention to some of the things I like and don't like about it, for a full rundown you can always visit the website. It has built in support for things like WordPress and CakePHP, which I have to say is pretty awesome. I am always more than happy to review any software or hardware, and there is nothing I like more than a nice IDE, so I jumped at the chance and for the last week, have been doing 80% of my 9-5 coding using CodeLobster What is CodeLobsterĬodeLobster is a Windows based PHP IDE, its core aim seems to be to allow you to create websites and web applications with the least amount of resistance possible. I was recently asked by the folks at CodeLobster if I wouldn't mind checking out their software and writing a quick review of it.
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