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Notepad++ for linux mint
Notepad++ for linux mint






notepad++ for linux mint

On Mac OS X, I have used BBEdit since the early 1990's, so I use that as my reference for all other editors. Emacs seems the logical choice to me, but gedit is a great simple text editor with some nice features if that's all you are looking for. It is daunting at first (as I'm sure Vim is too), but the question was about text editors on Linux besides vi. UPDATE: I think gedit is exclusively GUI based though, so it would be useful to learn emacs in case you are stuck with just a shell (it is fully featured in both shell and graphical mode).įURTHER UPDATE: Just FYI, I am not trying to push Emacs over Vim, it's just what I use, and it's a great editor (as I'm sure Vim is too). It comes with the OS as well (though emacs you can easily install with apt-get or some similar package finder utility). it has built in syntax highlighting as well for most languages based on the filename extension. If you want to start with something a lot more basic though, gedit is nice. If you keep at it, you can use exclusively the keyboard and never touch the mouse, which increases your editing speed by a significant margin. I have been using a ruby-mode which adds syntax highlighting and whatnot to ruby, and the same exists for every major language.

notepad++ for linux mint

You can access a shell, have as many files open as you want in as many sub-windows and an extremely powerful scripting support that lets you add all kinds of neat features.

notepad++ for linux mint

It has huge power once you become a power user.








Notepad++ for linux mint