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| 5 Online IDEs for On-The-Go Web Developers Posted: 25 Sep 2012 06:00 AM PDT Angry birds, sketch games, tower defense, social media browsing, and a thousand more apps for tablet computers. I’ve seen people use their tablet for entertainment and, well, just entertainment. But how can you use your tablet or smartphone for web development? Tablet computers and smartphones are indeed portable but what other use can you do with them aside from browsing Reddit and tagging photos of cute cats on Facebook and flinging wild birds onto measley-built fortresses? Can you develop websites and apps using smartphones and tablets? Don’t want to bring your heavy laptop? Why not code using your smartphone or tablet using Online IDEs? Cool?
Code Editors for Tablets, SmartPhones, and Any Computing DeviceNOTE: Take note that for server-side programming languages you will need to have an internet connection for them to work. To make it formal, these are called Online IDEs. The usual local machine setup you have for your programming needs is an IDE, Integrated Development Environment. Now, Online IDEs make use of the cloud to remove the barriers of coding, since it has been limited to just your machine for a couple of decades now. Now you can develop anywhere, using any machine, with colleagues. No need to setup Apache, Ruby, Python, C, C#, and others. Advantages of Using Online IDEsOnline IDEs have been around for quite some time now but they’ve garnered little attention. I know that a lot of web developers would simply work on their laptops or desktops to work, since they’re more powerful machines. But what about those who are always on the go, web developers who don’t want to carry heavy loads of baggages? Well, what do you know, with your smartphone or tablet computer you can code just about anywhere, as long as there’s an internet connection. If you are working with people scattered around the map, brainstorming and asking for help is quite pesky. With Online IDEs you can collaborate with people in real-time. Imagine Google Docs, only it’s for coding. Yep, let’s put it this way: it’s the Google Docs for coding. So, again:
Disadvantages of Using Online IDEs Well, this one is pretty obvious. You can’t use Online IDEs without internet connection! 5 Online IDEs for the On-The-Go Web Developer1. CodeRunCodeRun supports C#, HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and PHP. Totally free development environment that you can access anywhere you are as long as you have an internet connection. 2. CompilrCompilr supports HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Node.js, PHP, Python, Ruby, and a lot more. It is an online compiler that works for every device, no matter what the OS is. All you need to have is an internet connection. 3. ShiftEditShiftEdit supports PHP, Ruby, Python, Perl, HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. No need to install anything on your device to test your code since everything is taken cared of by ShiftEdit, and online IDE. 4. Cloud9 IDECloud9 IDE probably takes the cake since it is fully loaded with features that you’d see on a professional developer’s arsenal. All you need to have is an internet connection and you’re ready to roll. Cloud9 IDE supports HTML, CSS, JavaScript, PHP, Perl, Python, Ruby, XML, Java, and a dozen more. It also allows online collaboration with your team! 5. Cloud IDECloud IDE supports HTML, JavaScript, Ruby, PHP, Ruby on Rails, and a lot more. It also has a collaborative editor where teams can work on a single project at the same time. What’s your Favorite Online IDE? |
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