I'm required to learn Python for work, its data gathering and analysis related...

I'm required to learn Python for work, its data gathering and analysis related, what IDE would suit this purpose the best?

Pydev unless your employer is willing to pay for it.

PyCharm, my dude.

Community PyCharm is meh. but yeah, commercial PyCharm is pretty damn good.

Geany for sure!

vim

Geany works well.

How so?
They are literally the same thing.

>
>How so?
>They are literally the same thing.

I'm confused as well. Especially if you're not doing web dev.

Pic unrelated

why is vim so ugly, is there a way to theme this?

Visual studio or visual studio code.

I keep it simple with IDLE+Unix shell but that might not work with big projects.

Visual Studio Code

My Visual Studio Code bros

Thanks

Op here, having a bit of problems with

>No Build Task found. Press 'Configure Build Task' to define one.

I already set the path, and mod the launch.json file, but when I type command+shift b it get that error. help?

Get IntelliJ PyCharm (Community Edition).

Any language touched by JetBrains is a blessed language.

Visual Studio Code is a Microsoft shill

>Using an IDE
OP is a faggot

WinPython or Anaconda or Python(x,y) -> Spyder

I tend to just use Notepad++ and a command prompt on Windows and Vim (with my meager skills at it) and terminal on Linux. I guess Atom could work on Linux, too.

Do you work at Airbus

Atom is for faggots

vim

The paid edition has stuff for web development. Otherwise the community edition is just as good.

>data gathering and analysis related
Jupyter Notebook.

use subllime 3 and download addons , you can even execute the scripts on the same page

its heavy and slow as fuck . installed it and removed it . went back to sublime text

True, idea is fucking patrician for Scala

An IDE for Python is dumb. Just use Atom or vim if you're 1337h4x0r

Fucking masochists. That's nothing to be proud of, f4gg07

I do a lot of data analysis and do just fine with vs code. Spyder is quite nice though. It's an IDE aimed at scientists some useful features for data analysis ect.

This. Jupyter Notebook uses "cells" which can have code or markdown (or some other stuff too I believe) allowing you to do data analysis in an organized, presentable fashion. Most other ways to do this are going to involve a lot more effort to keep organized if you want more than just raw numbers to look at, and they certainly won't be presentation quality unless you're pouring in even more time.

I would look into Jupyter Notebook, anaconda (has a bunch of scientific computing stuff), matplotlib (plots), numpy (better math tools), and pandas (data analysis library).

The IDE itself is good but code completion is complete garbage.
PTVS (visual studio not code plugin) and Jedi are a lot better.

B O T N E T
O
T
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T

>MIT licensed

Go away

GEANY
E
A
N
Y

this

>Python
>IDE
Seriously though, commercial PyCharm is great.

Spe, lighter then most and works great

I use VSCode but I used to use Geany, the IDE's arent really needed in my opinon for Python

pycharm is fucking awesome
it's the resharper goyims who have made it

no professional idiot, it's for work.

spyder

a-atom maybe?

no bully plz vscoders

I use softwares from anaconda!

EMACS, USE EMACS IF YOU WANT TO BE RESPECTED!!!

plz respond

IDE: UNIX
text editor: vim

tell your boss to fuck off with python and use R

OP here, I have to learn both, learning Python first though

>vim
>require plugins for a basic functionality like autocomplete

KEK

>require plugin for managing several files at the same time

KEK

>require plugin for project tree

KEK


what year is it again?