Do you guys have any pro-tips? @neurobongo @o_guest @neuromusichttps://twitter.com/fleabrained/status/1015356904426463233 …
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I agree. In terms gentle transition and quick start, though, JupyterLab is hard to beat. After you've gotten your footing, a good editor (e.g. Sublime, vim, emacs) will serve you well.
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I still generally prototype code in Jupyter and then move things to dedicated scripts once I've got the core functionality working. Agree that picking a solid editor to learn well makes a big difference.
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Prototype ≠ learning to code
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I dunno, for me they're the same thing a lot of the time. I know vaguely what I want to do computationally, but not how to do it, so I read through package documentation and Stack Overflow until I can cobble together something that works
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Yeah, agreed. But if you don't understand OO (Matlab only people typically don't) you need to use something other than a notebook to learn.
End of conversation
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