![]() Gitlens plugin is an excellent addition to the default Really easy testing & debugging with the built in visual debugger which supports PHPUnit, XDebug, Jest, Mocha etc etc etc.Local as well as Git history, the local history in particular has saved my bacon a number of times.Excellent composer support which is about to get even better.Built in code quality tools for everything, including editor config support.Complete integration of all major PHP and Front end frameworks and libraries: Symfony, Laravel, WordPress, Zend 2, React, Angular, JQuery – bascially everything.Deep understanding of the entire code base including code completion, refactoring, error prevention and integrated quality tooling.Main PHP Storm featuresīasically PHP Storm covers everything you need for developing web applications easily, from code quality to integrated phpunit and xdebug support, complete front end tooling, testing and debugging, all the way to local development environment setup via its docker or vagrant support and probably the best vcs integration I’ve ever used. When in the unusual situation of having to edit a 200MB SQL dump by hand…Sublime will handle this well and is still the go to tool for such things, for everything else I use PHP Storm now. But the main fundamental differences that I’ve experienced between the two types of applications are that code editors are usually fast (VS Code not so much due to it being based on Electron) and can edit large files well (again VS Code not so much). Its important to get this in early on, neither Sublime Text or VS Code are Integrated Development Environment applications, they are code editors that with the use of plugins can provide some of the features of an IDE. Sublime Text & VS Code are code editors NOT IDE’s ![]() So this is an opinionated write up, your personal use of each of these applications will be different then mine, but I do actually believe that PHPStorm has made me a better developer …which is a tough sell for any IDE to provide. Before that I was a hardcore SublimeText user for many years and a VS Code user for just less then a year. JetBrains released a new PHPStorm EAP release the other day which is always something to celebrate, so I shared the news with the team and was asked to stop ranting like a mad person on Slack about how good this IDE is compared to the teams favourite code editor VS Code and actually write a blog post with my reasons.īefore I begin, I have to outline that I’ve only been a devout PHPStorm dev for a year after a recommendation from a fellow Pragmatician and in reality have only a grip on most probably half of the features available if even that. ![]() Here’s his take on PHPStorm’s latest release: John Jeeves is a Senior WordPress Developer and Team Lead here at Angry Creative. ![]()
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