Description
Komodo IDE 6 is the first unified workspace for end-to-end development of dynamic web applications. A rich feature set for client-side Ajax languages such as CSS, HTML, Javascript and XML, coupled with advanced support for dynamic languages such as Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby and Tcl, enables developers to quickly and easily create robust web apps. Award-winning features include comprehensive editing and debugging, plus intelligent tools for regular expressions, team development, customization and unparalleled extensibility. The result is a powerful coding environment for framework stacks like Ruby on Rails and CakePHP and client libraries such as the Yahoo! UI Library and Dojo.
So you're a Web application developer? Developing in Perl, Python, PHP, Ruby or Javascript? Are you a Linux, Mac or Windows user? No matter what your choices are, the answer is ActiveState's Komodo IDE, an impressive cross-platform and cross-language environment for building Web applications. And oh yeah, it's a really great tool that makes working in all these languages a breeze.
Features that Make You Faster
Komodo IDE 6's new Publishing lets you work locally and sync to your remote server. The Sections List, Go to Definition and Hyperlinks updated help you grok code faster. Quickly dig into your website's database with the Database Explorer. Use the local and remote debuggers (supporting over a dozen languages and versions) for nitty-gritty bug squashing. Work with every source code control system under the sun. Use the acclaimed Rx Toolkit to master regular expressions. All of this is wrapped around a sweet core editor.
HTML 5, CSS 3, Python 3, Perl 5.12
The development world is moving fast and Komodo helps you keep up. Komodo IDE 6 adds full Python 3 support (syntax checking, code intelligence, debugging), updated autocomplete for Perl 5.12 and full autocomplete support for HTML 5, CSS 3 and the latest versions of jQuery, Dojo and YUI.
Advanced support for:
* Browser-side technologies: CSS, HTML, javascript, and XML;
* Server-side languages: Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, and Tcl;
* Web template languages: RHTML, Template-Toolkit, HTML-Smarty, and Django;
* Autocomplete and calltips;
* Schema-based XML/HTML completion;
* Multiple-language file support, such as CSS and javascript completion in HTML;
* Framework support for Rails and Zend;
* Support for adding third-party libraries;
* Interpreter version differentiation of built-in and standard library information.
So you're a Web application developer? Developing in Perl, Python, PHP, Ruby or Javascript? Are you a Linux, Mac or Windows user? No matter what your choices are, the answer is ActiveState's Komodo IDE, an impressive cross-platform and cross-language environment for building Web applications. And oh yeah, it's a really great tool that makes working in all these languages a breeze.
Features that Make You Faster
Komodo IDE 6's new Publishing lets you work locally and sync to your remote server. The Sections List, Go to Definition and Hyperlinks updated help you grok code faster. Quickly dig into your website's database with the Database Explorer. Use the local and remote debuggers (supporting over a dozen languages and versions) for nitty-gritty bug squashing. Work with every source code control system under the sun. Use the acclaimed Rx Toolkit to master regular expressions. All of this is wrapped around a sweet core editor.
HTML 5, CSS 3, Python 3, Perl 5.12
The development world is moving fast and Komodo helps you keep up. Komodo IDE 6 adds full Python 3 support (syntax checking, code intelligence, debugging), updated autocomplete for Perl 5.12 and full autocomplete support for HTML 5, CSS 3 and the latest versions of jQuery, Dojo and YUI.
Advanced support for:
* Browser-side technologies: CSS, HTML, javascript, and XML;
* Server-side languages: Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, and Tcl;
* Web template languages: RHTML, Template-Toolkit, HTML-Smarty, and Django;
* Autocomplete and calltips;
* Schema-based XML/HTML completion;
* Multiple-language file support, such as CSS and javascript completion in HTML;
* Framework support for Rails and Zend;
* Support for adding third-party libraries;
* Interpreter version differentiation of built-in and standard library information.

