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Hazarth95373yIf money isn't an issue (or you have your ways) then "CLion" is an excelent IDE by jetBrains
If you want a free and simple to use solution then "Code::Blocks" is a very good IDE that I used for a long time as a beginner (it does crash on linux frequently, or did at the time, on Windows It's stable though)
If you want to learn the more nuanced things like Makefiles and GCC or G++ then "Visual Studio Code" is excelent and is what I currently use, but it has a learning curve due to not managing the compilation process for multifile projects (maybe there's a plugin for it, but Im comfy with Makefiles)
Lastly, for the quick and dirty start you can literally use a text editor (perhaps notepad++ for syntax highlighting, but any works) and google how to use gcc from the terminal. But I wouldn't recommend this unless you're curious about how It's done in the background -
I'll comply with that request.
It's called GCC
You don't need an IDE for that stuff.
I mean there's CLion but that's expensive so just use Atom maybe. Or vim. Or nano. -
Xoka12783yIf you want ease of installation, go with CodeBlocks.
If you want retro like feelings, go with Borland Turbo C
If you want to enjoy the best debugging & development experience, also wanna spend some money, go with CLion + gcc
If you want to just try C/C++ for a few days, go with VS Code + gcc
& if you wanna know more, just Google
I'm a beginner . Can you guys please suggest me a good complier for C programming.
random