![]() Now, IDE's like MS Visual Studio are great, no doubt about it, and MS have one of the best debuggers experiences around. And there is no packet manager and no default directory to look for headers and libraries. All the handy tools you have in OSX and Linux like cut, more, less, xargs and sed aren't there either. Windows does not emulate proper terminals, nor does it support proper shell scripts out of the box. Devices are not mapped as files, the file system does not have a single root like '/' and other partitions can't be mapped on the root. How? For one, Windows' POSIX compliance is far from stellar. At least not without the operating system making it possible. ![]() But the thing is that software development can't be fully contained in a handy IDE.
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