OpenSuse, Arch or Kubuntu for everyday use and getting to learn code
OpenSUSE's KDE implementation is really well designed.
Any distro will do. Try them in VM and pick the one you like.
antergos reporting in
>>55950112
Out of those, arch is the easiest to use, which means you have most time to learn to program
>>55950198
is that a good distro for beginners to linux as a whole?
OP here. Soo Arch because its the easiest to use
>>55950112
Out of the three, Kubuntu. Otherwise, Mint. Nothing wrong with Windows for coding too.
>>55950112
use live until you get comfy
>>55950548
But why Kubuntu
>>55950521
>>55950208
that guy fucked with you. If you are trying to get into coding, dont start with Arch as your first linux OS, getting into it will eat your time and hold you back from other stuff.
>>55950720
Soo which OS then
>>55950112
>"learn" ""code""
I think OSX might be better suited for your kind.
>>55950862
of the three you asked about, i'd guess Kubuntu is easiest. If your Computer has the resources to get along well with Plasma/KDE. If not, you can still try Ubuntu with another DE than KDE like Xfce(Xubuntu), LXDE(Lubuntu) or just Ubuntu as it is.
>>55950898
i wonder what they call your kind in the real world
>>55950112
During programming some additional packages may be necessary and you can find anything in ubuntu's ppa (I guess there are even more packages than in Arch's AUR). So Kubuntu or other ubuntu-like is the best choice
>>55950644
If you want KDE use opensuse. People who don't like KDE are people who tried Kubuntu.