![]() ![]() ![]() On the other hand, it's hard to compare with Xcode's debugging features. I personally love the editing feeling of MacVim most, by far. I have experience with all three of them. It will run on other Linux windowing systems given Qt is installed, but I personally think these are the three platforms on which Qt applications integrate best. It uses the Qt SDK so your code should be cross-platform among Windows, KDE, and OS X. Qt Creator is an IDE, yet it's very lightweight and quite simple at first-glance. Then there's Qt Creator, which comes with the Qt SDK.On the GUI text-editing scene on the Mac these are the dominating giants. Of course, I heard there's also Emacs on OS X, if that's your sex-appeal, or TextMate. If you're the "flee market" kind of person (like me!) then MacVim with make (or any other build tool) and other tools is your thing.Xcode is to OS X what Visual Studio is to Windows. If you're the "full-blown IDE kind-of-person" then Xcode is the way to go.
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