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-   -   NEW TO PYTHON (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=135998)

TimTheGreat 24-03-2015 17:25

Re: NEW TO PYTHON
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by FrankenmuthK (Post 1461638)
Where would I find the simulator

Once you code, in eclipse you can create a runtime environment with 'sim' as the argument, or in terminal, type
Code:

python robot.py --sim

virtuald 24-03-2015 22:05

Re: NEW TO PYTHON
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by FrankenmuthK (Post 1461638)
Where would I find the simulator

What Tim said. Plus, to actually install it, you should install pyfrc. See the website for installation instructions, and you can read about simulator usage there too.

tcjinaz 25-03-2015 22:14

Re: NEW TO PYTHON
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by TimTheGreat (Post 1461558)
Why do you find it heavy? Is there something wrong with earth's gravitational pull where you live?

:)

It's a resource hog, therefore it places a heavy load on its host, so it makes the world seem like gravity is exceeding 1G

At work, we can pile more Emacs users on a VNC server than Eclipse users.

Fauge7 26-03-2015 10:29

Re: NEW TO PYTHON
 
For python you should not use eclipse and probably use some other ide. It is a resource hog but if you have a computer made in the last 3-4 years your should be able to use it. Don't use a classmate to run eclipse and you should be fine.

Aero 27-03-2015 10:57

Re: NEW TO PYTHON
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Fauge7 (Post 1462367)
For python you should not use eclipse...

I disagree. If you're familiar with Eclipse, it's not a terrible Python IDE, and familiarity will make your development much easier. If you've never used Eclipse or any other Python-supporting IDE, I'd recommend JetBrains' PyCharm. They'll also give you full educational licenses of all their software if you email em and ask!

mistersands 04-05-2015 08:21

Re: NEW TO PYTHON
 
Is the free community version of PyCharm sufficient for FRC purposes?

TimTheGreat 04-05-2015 08:34

Re: NEW TO PYTHON
 
Yes but you should definitely use eclipse so you can make use of the pyfrc plugins

x86_4819 04-05-2015 09:25

Re: NEW TO PYTHON
 
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the only thing that the plugins do for you is give you nice pre-configured buttons to launch your code with the various runtime options (run, deploy, sim, etc) -- which you can easily setup run configurations to do this in PyCharm. I have found PyCharm Community edition to work very well, and have used it exclusively over the past FRC season.

virtuald 04-05-2015 10:20

Re: NEW TO PYTHON
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by x86_4819 (Post 1479813)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the only thing that the plugins do for you is give you nice pre-configured buttons to launch your code with the various runtime options (run, deploy, sim, etc) -- which you can easily setup run configurations to do this in PyCharm. I have found PyCharm Community edition to work very well, and have used it exclusively over the past FRC season.

This is correct. If you're not used to configuring things for yourself, Eclipse is the way to go. However, I've heard good things about PyCharm too.


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