tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7395797351911594965.post4421678024750848769..comments2024-03-24T23:19:53.674-07:00Comments on Richard Geldreich's Blog: A Shout-Out to QtCreator 2.8.x on LinuxRich Geldreichhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14358203173986928600noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7395797351911594965.post-13872216019867227892013-10-19T23:18:47.025-07:002013-10-19T23:18:47.025-07:00Yea, for Windows I can imagine it being a tough se...Yea, for Windows I can imagine it being a tough sell, but once you leave the "safe" confines of MS's world QtCreator looks particularly nice.<br /><br />Also, these days I'm super wary of getting locked into MS technologies because I've learned the hard way how hard it can be to dig yourself out.<br /><br />Sorry, I don't know how to make intellisense auto activate but I can ask some VS wizards if they know.Rich Geldreichhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14358203173986928600noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7395797351911594965.post-11801957725832744962013-10-19T21:20:58.680-07:002013-10-19T21:20:58.680-07:00Downloaded it and tried-- seems really good for a ... Downloaded it and tried-- seems really good for a none VS IDE. Really tempting since it would presumably allow the use of Clang on windows which is way ahead of VS in conformance to C++11/14.<br /><br />VS2013 is a very nice IDE though... super responsive and compiles faster than previous VS. So I don't think I'll switch to qtCreator on windows yet--But for none windows platforms this looks great. <br /><br />Do you know of a way to make the intellisense auto activate without having to hit cntl-space, like it works in Visual Assist? niadhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08197767290360188611noreply@blogger.com