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A number of the folks on the development team use RubyMine for editing and development. Depending upon the time of measure you're writing, it's may be easiest to use the "Apply Measures Now" feature in the OpenStudio Application to quickly apply your code to a simple model. You'll get the standard reporting from the measure as it's running on your model, and you can visually inspect what it did right there in the application. If it's a reporting feature or something designed to run as part of a complex workflow, that's probably easiest to run at the command line. David, Andrew, or one of the other developers will probably chime in with tips on how they develop measures.

A number of the folks on the development team use RubyMine for editing and development. Depending upon the time type of measure you're writing, it's may be easiest to use the "Apply Measures Now" feature in the OpenStudio Application to quickly apply your code to a simple model. You'll get the standard reporting from the measure as it's running on your model, and you can visually inspect what it did right there in the application. If it's a reporting feature or something designed to run as part of a complex workflow, that's probably easiest to run at the command line. David, Andrew, or one of the other developers will probably chime in with tips on how they develop measures.

A number of the folks on the development team use RubyMine for editing and development. Depending upon the type of measure you're writing, it's it may be easiest to use the "Apply Measures Now" feature in the OpenStudio Application to quickly apply your code to a simple model. You'll get the standard reporting from the measure as it's running on your model, and you can visually inspect what it did right there in the application. If it's a reporting feature or something designed to run as part of a complex workflow, that's probably easiest to run at the command line. David, Andrew, or one of the other developers will probably chime in with tips on how they develop measures.

A number of the folks on the development team use RubyMine for editing and development. Depending upon the type of measure you're writing, it may be easiest to use the "Apply Measures Now" feature in the OpenStudio Application to quickly apply your code to a simple model. You'll get the standard reporting from the measure as it's running on your model, and you can visually inspect what it did right there in the application. If it's a reporting feature measure or something designed to run as part of a complex workflow, that's probably easiest to run at the command line. David, Andrew, or one of the other developers will probably chime in with tips on how they develop measures.