Webcast recap: Your favorite ways to work with GitHub
Integrated development environments (IDEs) 2017 was a busy year for IDEs and GitHub. From new additions like Xcode to complete rewrites of some of our favorites like GitHub Desktop, there’s…
Integrated development environments (IDEs)
2017 was a busy year for IDEs and GitHub. From new additions like Xcode to complete rewrites of some of our favorites like GitHub Desktop, there’s been a lot to cover.
The GitHub Professional Services Team (and special guests from each respective organization!) recorded a full webcast series to help you catch up on some of our favorites and kick off 2018 right. If you weren’t able to attend live, check out our list of full recordings below to learn more and improve your day-to-day GitHub interactions with the tools you already use.
- GitHub and IntelliJ IDEs
- GitHub and Atom
- GitHub and Visual Studio
- GitHub and GitHub Desktop
- GitHub and Eclipse
- GitHub and Xcode
What’s next?
2018 is all about integrated tools to build on and improve your workflow.
To show you how easy it is to get started with our freshly-launched GitHub Marketplace, we’ll be diving into a few different types of products that can make your job easier.
We already kicked off the series with Code Quality through Codacy. Black Duck (open source security) and Sentry (error reporting) are coming up!
Written by
Related posts
First Look: Exploring OpenAI o1 in GitHub Copilot
We’ve tested integrating OpenAI o1-preview with GitHub Copilot. Here’s a first look at where we think it can add value to your day to day.
GitHub Availability Report: August 2024
In August, we experienced one incident that resulted in degraded performance across GitHub services.
Fine-tuned models are now in limited public beta for GitHub Copilot Enterprise
Fine-tuned models empower organizations to receive code suggestions specifically tailored to their coding practices and internal languages.