![]() It can even sync to your other devices! 4. Retains current IDE settings even when you logged in with a new account - removes the pain of reconfiguring the IDE again. Inspect/Analyze Code - this is without a doubt my most favorite feature. ![]() Really helpful especially for large projects! 2. Find Usage / Go to Declaration - this works even on a dynamic type language like PHP. My favorite features of JetBrains IDE: 1. ![]() I was scared that it would reset the IDE settings because I switched to a new account. I also liked the fact that when I used another account (logged out the old account and logged in with a new one), it retained the settings of the IDE. To be honest, comparing to VS Code, I don't see much difference in performance, and JetBrains' IDEs are packed with so much productivity features that I consider it a heavyweight. Regarding the IDE itself, I'm shocked that this beast runs like it's not a heavyweight. To me, that's top-notch customer support. Their customer support not only answers inquiries, they also provide helpful links for further reading if you'd need to. All questions have been answered (via email) within 1 business day, sometimes faster. I had some questions regarding the IDE itself (technical) and about getting a subscription but for a different email. It was enough for me to consider getting a year of subscription after the trial ended. This is really nice because it is more than enough time to evaluate the IDE. First thing, they offer 30 days trial on their IDEs. I'm a new customer and let me write about what you would expect from JetBrains. Just hope they don’t get bought out or something and turn to the dark side. At the risk of sounding like an enthusiast, JetBrains is one of the best companies I’ve ever dealt with and recommending them to my employer certainly did my reputation no harm. Their online tutorials and documentation are also very helpful and extensive. I’ve just used it to create postgres versions of our sql server databases and even though no keys were declared in the original databases, it automatically assigned virtual keys and the resulting diagram is a thing of beauty (well, considering it’s a diagram). DataGrip itself is amazing and I am delighted with the new release which allows you to migrate multiple tables from one db vendor to another - it’s what inspired me to finally write this review. They also said it’s fine for me to use DataGrip on my laptop at home as well as the server at work, which I appreciate. We work offline and JetBrains gave us the licenses for that like within a day. When I attempt a connection and it fails, nothing at all gets into idea.log from what I can see.A few months ago we started using their DataGrip software and our admin who handles purchasing still practically swoons over how helpful and responsive they were, especially in comparison to other companies she’s dealing with. I also find that DataGrip doesn't log much about its attempted connections. If I'm going to connect to a database on :2345 after tunnelling to :22 and both 2345 and 22 are occupied locally, where do I put all that information? Maybe once I understand that, it'll be easier to make the connection. the hostname the proxy / bastion / jump host should use?) or is it the host DataGrip will use, which is presumably localhost? Is the port the final port (on the db server) or the port you want DataGrip to use locally? Still struggling to configure DataGrip with SSH Tunnels, which is a big blocker for me to use it more - I keep going back to dbvisualizer (which is fine, really - but since I have DataGrip too, i'd like to compare them a bit more).Ĭurrently, I have trouble even finding all the bits. On the general tab, is the host the host you'll connect to after establishing the tunnel (e.g.
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