I also use Android Studio. If you want to make it faster, here are some tips: Don't use a virtual device, use your own phone. By deactivating anti virus software, it and turning on wifi the building time shrinks by 30% Also close other applications. With this hacks it takes me like 30 seconds to open Android Studio. (I also have a 4gb laptop)
@@kiryl-film I actually got better laptop last year and SSD this year too. But this tricks works like charm, thanks for sharing them. I, for a fact think that Antivirus are useless softwares for personal computers. They eat up so much of your RAM and makes everything so much slow. I always disable it whenever I get to work on a PC. 😂😂 Also about the virtual device one. I have to regretfully say that it still doesn't work with 8gb ram. It's so slow that I never even bother to install it's packages anymore. Better idea to save space than wasting it on that.
@@kiryl-film you can also reduce ram usage by removing the bundled plugins that you don't use. It's also possible to toy with the jvm arguments to shrink it down even more
@@reeti5958 Is the RAM upgradeable? Also may depend on the CPU a bit. But probably mostly RAM. I don't have much experience with Android Studio, but Visual Studio can sometimes take up to 6 GB on a high day. Thankfully I was able to get a laptop with plentiful RAM.
I like to manually align a magnet back and forth over my hard drive with the utmost precision to manually flip the bits. Or, if I’m feeling confident, I might use Vim.
absolutely true. By far the best editor for a lot of reasons. It is like an union between a text based editor in terms of lightweight and an IDE for features
Getting out of vim/neovim is actually incredibly simply, you simply switch tty’s. If you’re out of tty’s, then there’s a handy keyboard shortcut where you just hold the power button to close it.
IDEs are also incredibly specialized. If you’re only ever working in a certain language and want really robust debugging, they are usually the way to go, while options like VSCode are great for those just learning or who work in many different languages frequently. And there are usually better debuggers you can get from online
I remember an old editor published in a PC magazine many many years ago. It was in ASM and compiled to 3 kB. It was called, Tiny Editor (TED). I'd load it onto a boot 5.25" floppy, remember I said it was a long time ago, and edit my C code. It could only edit files that would fit in a segment, but that was more than enough. It kinda looked like a stripped down version of Nano. I really liked it back then.
Notepad, not even the Notepad++, it has a great design, and for me personally, it feels like home because I used to write batch files and visual basic script in the 2000s so notepad will be stuck at my heart. ❤
I see so many people online calling VS shit cause Rider or Vs Code is better but tbh we have VS 2022 at my job and I have nothing bad against VS. Great IDE with a lot of very useful features and good extensions.
@@philippebaillargeon5204 does VS Studio not have a terminal? because when me and my friend tried writing C in it we couldn't just straight up run the program, we had to go through a bunch of stuff, i am kinda new so im still learning, please tell me if you know any great editor that was in built terminal?
@@Aliasger2029 VS Studio code has a terminal, its like first or second item in one of the menus. Or CTRL+T I think.. but it usually is on the bottom of the screen as a default
I remember someone's debate over how VSCode is worthless because it's not an IDE, completely disregarding the fact that it's built to be highly extendable and since it's mostly built for web dev, it can't really have an included compiled (which would make it an IDE) because there are just too many compilers/bundlers/transpilers one has to use when developing a web app...
Notepad++ is everything that’s wrong with modern society, I’m not even kidding. It was shitty and antiquated when it came out and it still is today, but people keep using it because they’re used to it and don’t know better.
**Correction:** Sublime Text uses same monetization model as WinRar. Can be used for free, but you'll get a "buy me pls" message everytime it opens. It's not much expensive tho, about 80$ i think
My only problem with most of them is that they're a subscription. I really love IDEA though. And I assume I'd love PyCharm, but haven't really used it. I've had trials for the others that don't have free versions, and I like that they're all the same, just with different languages.
@@thesituation5315 the subscription is expensive but you can you too if you are a student. I use jetbrains for like one and a half year with student subscription
Sublime is paid like WinRAR is paid, it just occasionally asks you politely if you'd like to spend money on it. You have access to the fully-featured version of the software for free.
I’m using Helix, it’s like vim, but you have sort of everything out of the box, and the shortcuts are really useful and easy to learn, because there’s cheatsheets everywhere than you can activate to remember shortcut. Has Lsp, debugging, tree sitter, fzf, really great tool. Build in rust so it’s blazingly fast too.
@@ZagoorlandI tried, I did not like it at all. I simply prefer a fast, snappy and not bloated text editor. It needs to be a text editor, if I wanted all the useless btw stuff that VSCode offers I’d just use VC.
I use different editors for different programming languages. But generally, Microsoft Notepad is a really good writing software with an amazing lightweight feel.
People always just say vim has this huge learning curve but leave out the fact that neovim and various distributions of it like lunarvim exist with shallower learning curves and a more complete ide like experience.
Use Vscode or name any other code editor that can: HTML live preview, pdf view, hex view, ipynb editor, picture editing and even diffing, show daily reddit memes
For me Vim was super easy to learn. If anyone is wondering :q exits, :q! exits but its forced :wq exits and saves :wq! exits and saves and forces. Also, to edit press i and to exit insert mode (which is the mode you have to be in to edit) you press esc (you have to exit insert mode to exit Vim
Right now after 7 years of Python I have finally made the move to a IDE. I chose Spider because its light weight and its geared towards data science and AI. And its made by MIT.
Pycharm IDE is the perfect IDE for python. The best tip for the super slow load at every first use is to load it then make a cup of coffee for the whole office then you can finally start coding.
"Just write some code"
That one guy who does nothing in the office: yeah thats not happening
🤣🤣🤣
How about i copy some code
@@user-gl9mf3zo7r know > learn > write > copy > nothing
Why are you recommending VIM? You can even close VIM.
@@jamestamz :q to quit the program, :wq to save and quit
Me who uses PyCharm to write C++:
My goals are beyond your understanding
HOW
WHY
TRUE EVIL !!
How
Yes officer this is the guy
me too
Me who imagines code, writes it in my own memory and compiles it in my head:
My goals are beyond your understanding
yeah compiling and writing code in your mind is way better, you have way more RAM than any computer has, and you won't get memory leaks
@@_khaine You won't get memory leaks unless you've imported the Alzheimers package
@@b48292 lmao
@@b48292 😂😂
@@b48292 how do I do that
Before opening Vim, make sure to backup ur important data and have a bootable USB ready to reinstall the OS just in case u cannot exit Vím
you can exit vim without any writes using: :q!
basically, it means "yes! i want to quit now!"
@@can2835I just do Shift ZQ
Or Ctrl+Z to push vim to the background
@@can2835What are you saying man!!!! Could’ve lost someone’s work! Use :wq!
Never mind. Have ready a new computer.
"IDE might take sometime to load."
Android Studio on 4gb RAM: "By sometime I meant 15 minutes and then also don't think about smooth coding."
I also use Android Studio. If you want to make it faster, here are some tips:
Don't use a virtual device, use your own phone.
By deactivating anti virus software, it and turning on wifi the building time shrinks by 30%
Also close other applications.
With this hacks it takes me like 30 seconds to open Android Studio.
(I also have a 4gb laptop)
🤣
@@kiryl-film I actually got better laptop last year and SSD this year too.
But this tricks works like charm, thanks for sharing them.
I, for a fact think that Antivirus are useless softwares for personal computers. They eat up so much of your RAM and makes everything so much slow. I always disable it whenever I get to work on a PC. 😂😂
Also about the virtual device one. I have to regretfully say that it still doesn't work with 8gb ram. It's so slow that I never even bother to install it's packages anymore. Better idea to save space than wasting it on that.
@@kiryl-film you can also reduce ram usage by removing the bundled plugins that you don't use. It's also possible to toy with the jvm arguments to shrink it down even more
@@reeti5958 Is the RAM upgradeable? Also may depend on the CPU a bit. But probably mostly RAM. I don't have much experience with Android Studio, but Visual Studio can sometimes take up to 6 GB on a high day. Thankfully I was able to get a laptop with plentiful RAM.
Me, who uses Sublime text for free: "wait, its paid?"
Literally my exact same thought.
Yeah this is what I was confused about
@@HenryTitor I'm use sublime text without "hacking" and I had downloaded it from official site for free. I think that video have wrong text...
@@XriXis I meant the “buy Sublime Text” popup. I was surprised the newest Dev version only request you to edit 6 Hex value to breakthrough
same thought
I like to manually align a magnet back and forth over my hard drive with the utmost precision to manually flip the bits. Or, if I’m feeling confident, I might use Vim.
I use vs code for literally everything, web development,java,c++, you name it, I love how versatile that editor is 🙂
The summary of the video: use Notepad++
Seriously. Free, light weight, tons of language support, including custom. Whats not to like about it?
@@HalcyonVoid notepad++ doesn't officially support linux, but there's a similar alternative called notepadqq
Sublime Text may be downloaded and evaluated for free, however a license must be purchased for continued use.
~ From the official website
absolutely true. By far the best editor for a lot of reasons. It is like an union between a text based editor in terms of lightweight and an IDE for features
@@HalcyonVoid At the time when I wrote this comment I was joking but now I really respect the notepadd++ capacities and his awesome features
I think I’ll install nvim and run it in emacs through a tmux session remotely on a raspberry pi from my WSL installation.
The normal linux user's experience then
Flexed on
Which happens to be a windows vm managed manually via libvirt on a thinkpad x2000 running gentoo via core boot.
Notepad++ is a great lightweight code editor.
a lil bit too lightweight for most
I use PowerPoint to code ;)
PowerPoint is pretty good, but a little strong for me 😅
@@livegoth i use word to code
I use discord chat to code
I’m a notepad++ user and I’m proud of it (I do python, html, Java and c++ in that)
If you don't mind me asking, can you execute code from within Notepad++? To me it seems like you're forced to save file and manually run the thing.
Vim - best method to produce random sequences… when You dont know how to close
Esc :q
Getting out of vim/neovim is actually incredibly simply, you simply switch tty’s. If you’re out of tty’s, then there’s a handy keyboard shortcut where you just hold the power button to close it.
I know it's a meme, but I'll tell you Escape and then ZZ (or ZQ to not save) is a much better alternative than escape and :wq
Press escape then type :q to exit
sudo shutdown is the command to exit vim
For lightweight I use nano 🙃
i love nano's syntax highlighting. really simple
may god help you
I didn't even notice until relatively recently that I'd been using nano. I'm still calling it using pico but now I have to wonder when it changed.
Try MICRO TEXT EDITOR, it's nano on steroids
GNU Nano the true minimalism
Me, who uses Microsoft Word: "pffft"
Meanwhile me, who uses google docs 😎
I use Microsoft Excel to write code.
Me who use paper to write
Me, who doesn't even write code.
No code is better than any code and every code.
@@nayankumarbarwa4317 no code === no bugs
IDEs are also incredibly specialized. If you’re only ever working in a certain language and want really robust debugging, they are usually the way to go, while options like VSCode are great for those just learning or who work in many different languages frequently. And there are usually better debuggers you can get from online
You forgot about the ultimate code AND text editor : the code editor that only the chaddest of the chads use : notepad
True chad
Me using editor created by me in Assembly: My powers are beyond your understanding
Wtf you really did that?
@@turnoff7572 Yep
I remember an old editor published in a PC magazine many many years ago. It was in ASM and compiled to 3 kB. It was called, Tiny Editor (TED). I'd load it onto a boot 5.25" floppy, remember I said it was a long time ago, and edit my C code. It could only edit files that would fit in a segment, but that was more than enough. It kinda looked like a stripped down version of Nano. I really liked it back then.
Notepad, not even the Notepad++, it has a great design, and for me personally, it feels like home because I used to write batch files and visual basic script in the 2000s so notepad will be stuck at my heart. ❤
Bro sublime text IS a paid software but the trial is unlimited, so basically it’s optional to pay
visual studio is very good and beginner friendly. I mean i only used it for lua but anyways
I see so many people online calling VS shit cause Rider or Vs Code is better but tbh we have VS 2022 at my job and I have nothing bad against VS. Great IDE with a lot of very useful features and good extensions.
@@philippebaillargeon5204 does VS Studio not have a terminal? because when me and my friend tried writing C in it we couldn't just straight up run the program, we had to go through a bunch of stuff, i am kinda new so im still learning, please tell me if you know any great editor that was in built terminal?
@@philippebaillargeon5204 rider.
@@Aliasger2029 VS studio has a terminal. Idk what you did, but I don't know a single IDE that has not a terminal.
@@Aliasger2029 VS Studio code has a terminal, its like first or second item in one of the menus. Or CTRL+T I think.. but it usually is on the bottom of the screen as a default
Visual studio for ever ❤️
For c# and unity right ?
@@thatsalot3577 yes
@@thatsalot3577 unity fell off
@@samochreno you do game development?
@@Isaac-eh6uu i used to
Sublime text is free to use, you only pay to remove a popup that comes up each time you start it up
For the absolute bare-bones editing I do for Garry's Mod or Warband, I love Notepad++. And it's great for tweaking .ini files too
Me using online c++ compiler🗿
- Vim/Neovim
- Emacs with evil-mode (Doom-emacs)
All other software is irrelevant
B-But w-what about my heckin 300mb GUI editor ??
Sublime is "pay if you want to" software, it costs nothing unless you want to pay. I love it
_Me using Notepad_ : *I am 4 parallel universes ahead of you in "lightweight code editor"*
What code editor do you use? 🤔
Hand written code on paper > OCR
Visual studio for ever ❤️
@@vipinchaudhary7915 genius by the word.
Neovim the best with everything what you need, working with some plugins like vscode
Is more hard to learn than vscode but has the rewards.
@@vipinchaudhary7915 the only true way. Don't trust those code editors. They always have some agenda.
After this video I decided to try Vim and now I cannot close it🤯💀
:q
or if you wanna save and quit type :wq
@@teasla7226 I just reinstalled Linux
@@yarikpetrenko lmao average day of a linux user
Type ZZ
I remember someone's debate over how VSCode is worthless because it's not an IDE, completely disregarding the fact that it's built to be highly extendable and since it's mostly built for web dev, it can't really have an included compiled (which would make it an IDE) because there are just too many compilers/bundlers/transpilers one has to use when developing a web app...
The best code editor for leightweightedness is Notepad++, it even has syntax highlighting
I like Webstorm. Been using it forever. Totally love it
Notepad++ is my favorite then again I do use vim from time to time as well.
Notepad++🤢
Notepad++ is kinda decent for html and css and terrible for everything else
@@adilg7078 it's good enough for python
++ is terrible
Notepad++ is everything that’s wrong with modern society, I’m not even kidding. It was shitty and antiquated when it came out and it still is today, but people keep using it because they’re used to it and don’t know better.
I do Assembly in vim and it works like a charm ✅✨ sometimes in notepad as well.
My favorite is just the classic visual studio community tbh
I tried vim for the first time and couldn’t exit 😂. Nano became my goto text editor.
We've all been there, bud. One does not simply escape the Vim bus.
use ":q", ":wq" or ":q!"
@@nvcbl don't forget escape if you are editing
@@nvcbl ZZ is faster
"you need to pay for sublime"
The hacker: nah that not going to happen
"you need to pay for sublime"
The dev: nah that not gonna happen (proceeds to download VS Code)
**Correction:** Sublime Text uses same monetization model as WinRar. Can be used for free, but you'll get a "buy me pls" message everytime it opens. It's not much expensive tho, about 80$ i think
While me still code on notepad++;🙂
I use jetbrains IDEs it's extremely powerful and save me a lot of time and clicks
My only problem with most of them is that they're a subscription. I really love IDEA though. And I assume I'd love PyCharm, but haven't really used it. I've had trials for the others that don't have free versions, and I like that they're all the same, just with different languages.
@@thesituation5315 the subscription is expensive but you can you too if you are a student. I use jetbrains for like one and a half year with student subscription
@@gio123vane456 How do you get a student subscription?
Whatever editor u use, Just write some code...
Me beginning to write code in UA-cam Comment section...
visual studio code /ooc code(on some versons of linux) is a really really good app ngl
Sublime is paid like WinRAR is paid, it just occasionally asks you politely if you'd like to spend money on it. You have access to the fully-featured version of the software for free.
Notepad++ xD
And Legent use notepad 😂😂😂
Nvim
I used to code using Notepad++, but that was only because I didn't know about IDEs back in the day
*_*me using notepad*_*
Eclipse for Projects, Vim for fast changes, Notepad++ as swiss knife.
I really love your shorts man! You pick the topics exactly what I need to know
I personally use Word. Customizable syntax highlighting, amazing spell check, what more could you want?
I'd love to, but where's the syntax highlighting in Word?
@@DavidG2P highlight text and choose the color and other formatting options you want, not getting more customizable than that!
@@czebosak Lol
ima using Visual Studio 2019
Sublime text when I'm an expert, IDE when I'm a beginner
That guy that use Notepad and Notepad++: *can you feel my heart intensify play in the background
it's me. i'm using gedt + g++ + online debugger
@MrHolyKindness 3 days later. i am using nvim with airline, nerd tree, dev-icons, coc.nvim and auto-pairs. IDE from nothing.
Vim 💚
vs code imo is the perfect balance between minimalism and features and extensions. If I can code in vs code, I try to do it.
Lewis! I love your videos sooo much. As a matter of fact: I love you!💕
Him: use VIM
Me: flashbacks*
HOW DO I EXIT?!??
There is no escape
:q
i use atom and vscode but most of time i use atom
rip atom :(
@@CodingWithLewis why
@@nobody-tk7vk they are officially abandoned
@@texrot9781 that doesn't the program will stop working!
I’m using Helix, it’s like vim, but you have sort of everything out of the box, and the shortcuts are really useful and easy to learn, because there’s cheatsheets everywhere than you can activate to remember shortcut. Has Lsp, debugging, tree sitter, fzf, really great tool. Build in rust so it’s blazingly fast too.
I use Atom. It’s great and lightweight
I use Notepad++ for most of my work.
Edit: Wow 10 Likes?! Never had so much
Thank you. :D
try vs code :) you won't regret it
@@Zagoorland I also have that but for most of my work, I use Npp.
@@ZagoorlandI tried, I did not like it at all. I simply prefer a fast, snappy and not bloated text editor. It needs to be a text editor, if I wanted all the useless btw stuff that VSCode offers I’d just use VC.
I am still stuck in vim, i can't get out...👴👴👴send help
:q
:q
there's no escape...
:q!
Me who write code with my head:
I am four parallel universes ahead of you
You're unironically unhinged if you use Vin as your primary code editor.
What about coding in Ms. Word?
Sublime is a paid software? Bro I've just been using the infinite trial
I was about to ask the same question :O
I use different editors for different programming languages.
But generally, Microsoft Notepad is a really good writing software with an amazing lightweight feel.
Brackets, brackets lets you use a live view mode that shows the changes you're making to a site as you make them. Great for fine tuning your css
Vi/Vim/Neo Vim for me, no matter what they say it's best Text Editor in Android and Linux, it makes my work robust
Vim supremacists
Notepad++: “Am I a joke to you?”
Notepad & CMD combo beats it all.
Visual Studio..
Yall newbies dont know Notes, right? 🤨
People always just say vim has this huge learning curve but leave out the fact that neovim and various distributions of it like lunarvim exist with shallower learning curves and a more complete ide like experience.
VS code is above all. I love it
You look like a discord mod but this was a great video! Thanks!
Use Vscode or name any other code editor that can:
HTML live preview, pdf view, hex view, ipynb editor, picture editing and even diffing, show daily reddit memes
Sublime text is my choice just because of the lightweight nature of it
For me Vim was super easy to learn. If anyone is wondering :q exits, :q! exits but its forced :wq exits and saves :wq! exits and saves and forces. Also, to edit press i and to exit insert mode (which is the mode you have to be in to edit) you press esc (you have to exit insert mode to exit Vim
Guys, use anything and don't spend too much time deciding this
I use microsoft word to code my lexical analyzer for my simple compiler project (Arial font)
For python I used spydey but now I'm using PyCharm and it's pretty good👍
vscodium is a solid choice especially if you are coming from Visual Studio and VS Code like me
"well that depends"
Thanks I got my answer
Been really enjoying pycharm
My preferred code editor is ms word
Sublime text is free you know. You can buy it but they give unlimited evaluation time so you don't have to buy it.
Right now after 7 years of Python I have finally made the move to a IDE. I chose Spider because its light weight and its geared towards data science and AI. And its made by MIT.
Thank you 🙏
Any editors can save your files, while only emacs can save your soul.
thats why i see visual studio code when i search up vsc
a good alternative to vim is emacs with a less steep learning curve while having cool features
Me who directly edit codes in the transistor chips in the binary
you forgot visual studio, the gargantuan of IDEs
People who uses notepad : Who needs something lighter anyway?
Pycharm IDE is the perfect IDE for python. The best tip for the super slow load at every first use is to load it then make a cup of coffee for the whole office then you can finally start coding.
I hate the debugger in pycharm vs spyder. Hard to deny spyder has the best debugger visualizations.
Sublime is my favourite editor on ubuntu and mac as well. I have no issue with free version because I like to keep the things simple.
I use Atom basically because it is lightweight, has simple interface and supports: Python, Java, HTML, CSS, JavaScript, C, C++, C# and more
I use vsc because its easy, it has custom themes, a lot of extensions and almost every coding language
Visual Studio Left the chat