Colors coda 2
![colors coda 2 colors coda 2](https://miro.medium.com/max/1400/1*YK6bROEu_j428-e-5cX9ug.png)
If you were a *very* advanced developer you might have been playing around with php frameworks, or even ruby on rails, and might even be using SVN to version-control your work. For more complex projects, you might setup a MySQL database.
![colors coda 2 colors coda 2](https://static.hudl.com/craft/_1200xAUTO_crop_center-center_none/Screen-Shot-2016-08-29-at-10.51.16-AM_200515_155215.png)
If you forgot your syntax, you’d google it, or reach for a printed manual. The usual process then involved coding HTML/CSS/JS by hand, and uploading files to your staging server via ftp. The process and technologies involved in developing websites has changed quite a lot since Coda 1.0 came out. It’s definitely my favorite Panic product, and looking forward to it’s next stellar release! Hoping to see / hear some updates soon though on Coda. Again, in their defense, Panic has been neck-deep in other endeavors lately, and attentions have been diverted a bit. There’s been a bit of a gap in major releases in Coda, and I’m hoping to get back onto a better release cycle going forward. I see the advances that some of these other IDE’s have been making (love multiple cursors in Sublime, and the rich extension eco-system of atom/brackets…), there’s a tinge of jealousy. I’ve been using it since it’s original release along with many other Panic products. With that said, I’m just an over-zealous Coda fan. I would whole-heartedly recommend Coda, but there’s a 14 day free-trial that you can test out so you’re not taking my word for it. Coda is a great IDEO, and I still haven’t found one that I like as an alternative after trying brackets, Atom, Sublime and a bunch of others. I don’t normally see the Panic fold reply in the blog. Don’t let the lack of response dissuade you from a purchase.