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Faceoff: Nine Linux text editors From the Paleozoic era (Emacs, KVIM) Writing code the modern way (Arachnophila, Bluefish, Komodo Edit, NEdit) Word processing lite (Gedit, Kate) All-in-one (Quanta ...
Learn the basics for using Emacs and vi text editors for your e-mail, Web design and programming needs in Linux. Written by Bruce Stewart, Contributor Feb. 8, 2001, 12:30 a.m. PT ...
Sublime Text is a proprietary, cross-platform text editor designed for people who spend huge amounts of time shuffling code around. A programmer's editor, Sublime Text is a third option to the ...
The advantage of using a plain text editor for your writing is that you can focus on your piece instead of formatting. With plain text, you don't need to figure out italics or boldface.
The VI text editor is the most used and popular Linux text editor. You can get it in almost any Linux distribution. There are two modes, Insert and Command. Command mode is used to take the user ...
Linux users have more text editors, IDEs, and command-line tools than a programmer can shake a stick at. If you're looking for a good programming text editor, we recommend Kate.
Master Emacs text editing in Linux Cruise along the learning curve for Emacs text editing with these basic commands. Written by Bruce Stewart, Contributor Feb. 9, 2001, 1:15 a.m. PT ...
I’m experimenting with desktop Linux (SuSE), and am looking for a robust text/html editor to stand in for the NoteTab Pro I use on Windows. I’m seeking: ...
Still, I’d prefer to find a text editor that’s meant to run on Linux. After my article was posted, readers offered a slew of suggestions for replacement editors.
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