Geek squad powers, activate!
May. 30th, 2008 09:52 pmI know I'm probably looking to start a religious war on my own journal, but help me out here, folks:
Which text editor would you recommend for me to use on the Ubuntu machine? I have been using TextPad on Windows, and I really like the syntax highlighting, global searches, and workspace functionality. Can you point me toward a text editor you really like, please?
Thank you!
Which text editor would you recommend for me to use on the Ubuntu machine? I have been using TextPad on Windows, and I really like the syntax highlighting, global searches, and workspace functionality. Can you point me toward a text editor you really like, please?
Thank you!
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Date: 2008-05-31 07:13 am (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2008-05-31 08:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-31 10:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-31 08:34 am (UTC)this is an interest of mine, so if you say what you don't like about any of them i'll hunt more up :)
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Date: 2008-05-31 08:37 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-31 08:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-31 08:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-31 08:45 am (UTC)no subject
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Date: 2008-05-31 09:11 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-31 10:28 am (UTC)Seriously, I've been an Emacs person since the mid-80's, and I still find it the best for sheer power, ability to make it do just the things I want to, and in particular that it focuses on actual editing - all the little things you do when editing.
For simple things I get along with gedit and the like fine, though. And I still edit config files and such in vi.
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Date: 2008-05-31 10:31 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-31 09:22 pm (UTC)I can explain why I do it. For big editing jobs, anything but emacs drive me nuts. But for small things I sometime find simple comforting, especially in a GUI type environment; it somehow blends in easier with cut'n'pasting things back and forth and making little notes.
As for config files, I tend to edit those while navigating around in a shell window, and from there fire up vi. Why? Habit - a habit formed 25 years ago and hard to break. Also, the vi editing commands seem to be by now hardwired in my neurons, just the way emacs commands are.
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Date: 2008-05-31 11:33 am (UTC)It's maybe gonna be weird, though, to have some mouse-based and some keyboard-based applications I use a lot. We'll see how it goes. I think I'm trainable. :-)
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Date: 2008-05-31 03:37 pm (UTC)I use KDE's kedit for simple GUI text editing. I use kate if I want to do block indenting.
I'm a casual user of vi. Ugly, but it's everywhere and I don't have to grab for a mouse.
I never learned emacs.
I'm unfamiliar with what would be good for multi-document projects. Let me know what you learn!
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Date: 2008-05-31 09:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-01 01:11 am (UTC)I sometimes go with jedit. If you go with emacs, you may want to check to be sure it's adding an end-of-line character at the end of the last line. Eclipse is even worse about that.