- RUBYMINE KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS FULL
- RUBYMINE KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS CODE
- RUBYMINE KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS TRIAL
- RUBYMINE KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS LICENSE
The 1.1 release already has great Cucumber support. This has been one of the few complaints I've heard and one of very few I have with it. I'm pretty sure it's not - it certainly doesn't look 100% native. I tried (and liked) both NetBeans and RadRails, but unfortunately because they're Java apps, they tend to be annoyingly slow sometimes. I wonder if RubyMine is a native Cocoa application. I got denied because I offer commercial hosting of my open source application.
RUBYMINE KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS LICENSE
The criteria for getting a free license is pretty tough. In RM1.0.5/Ubuntu there's an ugly bug, when all dropdown menus have huge spacing between items.
RUBYMINE KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS FULL
Waiting for full i18n support and performance fixes. I would get RubyMine, it costs like a TextMate, but it's much more powerful. very cool).ġ.5 and 2.0 might be game changers if they fix it up a bit Some amazing feature though, like ctrl click on any method to go straight to the source (including built in Rails and Ruby methods. 1.0 had major performance issues for large Rails projects, and lack of Haml support was a real drag. Used it for a week before switching back to Textmate. Not a commercial product? Isn't 75% of the Ruby world using Textmate? The best Ruby IDE currently around, which actually manages to not get in the way but make you a more productive developer. Thanks to JetBrains for the half off deal and keep up the great work! NetBeans lacks the features of RubyMine and even if RadRails/Aptana had the features, the Eclipse platform is far too sluggish and cumbersome. I've used both NetBeans and RadRails/Aptana Studio on Ubuntu linux.RubyMine is hands down the better product.
RUBYMINE KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS TRIAL
Luckily a thirty day trial is available to challenge your opinions.Ĭoming down the line, RubyMine 1.1 is already in the release candidate stage, and in the fall will be coming RubyMine 1.5 with anticipated support for Ruby 1.9, Cucumber, RCov, an integrated SQL console, and improved refactoring tools.ĭisclaimer: JetBrains, the company behind RubyMine, is a sponsor of Ruby Inside. Compared to what JetBrains charges for its Java IDE, this is a bargain, though ultimately may be hard for some Rubyists to stomach. It's a proprietary product available under two licenses, a free license for proven open source developers (there are some criteria), and the more typical $99/£74 commercial license. Short of a few minor issues, I'm seeing very little negative towards RubyMine, and even a few people who supposedly "hate" IDEs have given it a fair trial - high praise, indeed.ĭepending on your stance, one potential downside is that RubyMine is not an open source IDE. IDEs don't tend to be popular in Rubyland, but from observing people's responses to RubyMine both online and at RailsConf, I think RubyMine might well be the first cross-platform Ruby IDE that developers actually seem to love in droves. If you want to learn more about the background, motivation, and technical details behind RubyMine, check out this awesome interview with JetBrains developer Dmitry Jemerov. Does not support 1.9-specific features yet.