Introducing RustRover – A Standalone Rust IDE by JetBrains | The IntelliJ Rust Blog

elvis_depresley@sh.itjust.works to Programming@programming.dev – 143 points –
Introducing RustRover – A Standalone Rust IDE by JetBrains | The IntelliJ Rust Blog
blog.jetbrains.com
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Why is this necessary? I thought we've moved past language-specific IDEs.

We have? JetBrains never has stopped offering them.

Who wouldn't want an experience tailored to their main language? I certainly favor PyCharm over Ultimate

JetBrains is not representative of every editor / dev. Language servers mean I can use Emacs / Vim / VSCode / whatever else I want and have IDE features for whatever language I want.

Just as JetBrains is not representative of every dev, neither are LSPs. Some developers want a specialized IDE for their language(s), some want a highly customized editor with their language servers. As long as you efficiently produce code that works, who cares what other people use?

You can do that if you want to :

Like many of our IDEs, the functionality of RustRover can be installed as a plugin in IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate.

But if you only care about a particular language/stack you can use the dedicated IDE, it's cheaper and the UX is optimized for your use case.

That's a JetBrains plugin. It is just for JetBrains applications, and it closed source, right? Language servers are basically the metric system of IDEs. I can go from Emacs to Vim to VSCode and just use rust-analyzer for my IDE backend.

I don't understand the benefit of using JetBrains specific plugins that only work with JetBrains.

Because I (and many others) find their products to be far superior to the competition.

This. I'm using PyCharm with the new UI, and watching my colleagues struggle with VSCode is a bit painful to see. Not saying you can't be productive with it, but why make your life harder than it needs to be?

I think there's something for everyone. Some people want one editor for everything, some want one tailored to their language needs

This is the right answer, and I wish more people would grasp that.

Tech has an abundance of people who really need to be right in an argument. I've had this same argument with a developer at a client company of mine. Just couldn't let it go when I said I was comfortable with the Jetbrains suite and used their language specific tooling instead of VSCode.

JetBrains users kind of live in their own weird bubble. Of the ones I've worked with, a decent number didn't even know how to use git, they just relied on the built in vcs tools

And? Do you get high off of the smeeeelll of your own farts, sir madam?

Didn't know how to use git CLI? Who cares. Git CLI is garbage anyway

Edit: Ruffled some feathers lol. Seriously though, whoever named the functions... I want whatever they're on lol

Yea, I was thinking the same. I have the JetBrains toolbox, and already have these installed:

  • Rider
  • RubyMine
  • PyCharm
  • GoLand
  • CLion

I don't really get why they need to make 10 different IDEs for every language, instead of just consolidating everything into a single UI/IDE.

For pricing it doesn't make that much sense, anyone that wants more than 2 JetBrains products is better off buying the entire toolbox.

And there is already the Language Server Protocol, which basically everyone else uses.

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This is likely just rebranded intellij with some rust specific plugins and some UI adjustments like pycharm, goland, etc.

All the JetBrains IDEs feel like basically the same platform with different plugins and tweaks.

They can come in handy, for some people. I am certainly happy with VSCode

VSCode isn't language specific, is it? Why would they come in handy?

Almost all of these IDEs have language-specific features in them. PyCharm has Scientific tools (like SciView) for generating graphs using code and data. Rider features a pretty nice Windows Form builder for generating and creating GUIs for applications. Etc.

I can't imagine it being very useful or practical to unload all these language-specific plugins each time you open the program to write in a language that can't utilize those features.

You build workspaces with vscode but the real magic is you never have to switch to visual studio or spend time configuring plugins for a new workspace each time you start a new project

Because sometimes you have an irrepressible need to spend cash on an IDE?

What I am saying is that I don't need an IDE to program stuff. I am fine with VSCode with extensions. With extensions, VSCode can be a multi(programming)language IDE. I don't see the need to have different IDEs for different programming languages. They do have their benefits.

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I would've liked it more if they didn't deprecated IntelliJ Rust in favor of RustRover, I liked being able to write Rust in any JetBrains IDE if I needed it, now I'm stuck with an old, unsupported version of the plugin.

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I liked using CLion for both Rust and C++, now I see they outright deprecated the Rust plugin

It would be nice if it would work better

As in... ?

Last time I used it it couldn't even show errors in code that couldn't compile without using clippy all the time, which is suboptimal