![]() I found it as good as Netbeans, but not better. That said, I’ve tried PHP Storm, which seems to frequently top the list of favorites. You still have to install those tools separately, but once they’re on your machine, Netbeans will play nice with them. In the case of git, it highlights changes from the committed version. For instance, it finds your SASS gem automatically, has syntax highlighting and so forth. When I say that it’s “ready,” I mean that it auto-detects those tools. Netbeans already supported Composer, Symfony and Twig out of the box back with version 7.1. Netbeans is SASS-ready and also is ready to run with tools like Grunt, Gulp, and so forth. With the Netbeans 8.1 update, all of that comes with Netbeans out of the box. ![]() You almost certainly have at least git and possibly Grunt, Gulp, Bower and other tools as part of your workflow.Though not part of Drupal per se, more and more themes depend on SASS. Composer is the de facto standard, for getting up and running with a Drupal 8 site.Most themes at this point should be using HTML5 and CSS3, so again, you want an IDE that understands those.Drupal 8 is built on Symfony themed with Twig, so you want syntax highlighting support for Twig.Think of your ultimate toolkit for Drupal 8 development. At least for me Netbeans + Drupal equals the best combination out there for doing serious work. Netbeans and Drupal are still a winning combination as both move up to version 8.
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