lsparrish comments on PSA: Learn to code - Less Wrong
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Typically people use a keyboard shortcut to save, which makes it less painful.
For running your program, try typing
from your console/terminal/whatever after having navigated (by typing "cd directoryname" and "dir"/"ls" repeatedly) to the directory where your program is. After having typed the execution command once, you can just push the up arrow on your keyword to restore that command on the command line. So under ideal conditions, executing your program should consist of four actions: pushing a keyboard shortcut to save, switching to a terminal window, pushing the up arrow key, and pushing enter.
Probably the instructions I just gave you will be hard to follow because they are awfully compressed and I don't know your platform. So feel free to tell me if you run into a problem. You may wish to make an explicit effort to learn the command line; I believe there is a Hard Way book about it.
Another option is to use the editor that comes shipped with Python, sometimes referred to as IDLE. Once you figure out where it is and start it running, go to the file menu and choose new document or something like that. Then press F5 at any time. It should prompt you to save and then run your program. (If I recall correctly.)
I'm sure there's something unclear here, so please respond if you get stuck.
Thank you very much for your elaborate reply. Unfortunately I do seem to have miscommunicated; those steps as described by you are exactly what I dread. I feel like I do not know enough to ask the right questions, so: I want a program which lets me debug with as less actions as possible while also giving me easily accessible help/documentation. They seem to be called IDEs.
IDLE (which comes with Python) is an IDE. It simplifies testing to the point where you pretty much just hit F5 then hit enter to give it permission to save, and you see the result right away. Alt-tab brings the file you are editing back to the front when you are ready to fix the bug or continue hacking. I've used it on Windows and Linux and the experience is pretty much exactly the same either way. There is also a help menu which takes you to the documentation website where you can search for whatever you are looking for.