Text Editor For Linux (Besides Vi)?

LinuxEditor

Linux Problem Overview


Let me preface this question by saying I use TextMate on Mac OSX for my text needs and I am in love with it. Anything comparable on the Linux platform? I'll mostly use it for coding python/ruby.

Doing a google search yielded outdated answers.

Edit: Since there has been some concern about the 'merit' of this question. I am about to start a new Ruby Programming Project in Linux and before I got started I wanted to make sure I had the right tools to do the job.

Edit #2: I use VIM on a daily basis -- all . the . time. I enjoy using it. I was just looking for some alternatives.

Linux Solutions


Solution 1 - Linux

Solution 2 - Linux

Emacs is a wonderful text editor. It has huge power once you become a power user. 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.

I have been using a ruby-mode which adds syntax highlighting and whatnot to ruby, and the same exists for every major language.

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.

If you want to start with something a lot more basic though, gedit is nice... it has built in syntax highlighting as well for most languages based on the filename extension. It comes with the OS as well (though emacs you can easily install with apt-get or some similar package finder utility).

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).

FURTHER 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 is daunting at first (as I'm sure Vim is too), but the question was about text editors on Linux besides vi... 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.

Solution 3 - Linux

Kate, the KDE Advanced Text Editor is quite good. It has syntax highlighting, block selection mode, terminal/console, sessions, window splitting both horizontal and vertical etc.

Solution 4 - Linux

I use sublime Text on linux.

Solution 5 - Linux

Try Scribes . It tries to be a TextMate replacement for Linux

2020 edit: forgotten in the mists of history

Solution 6 - Linux

I use SciTE very small and simple text editor.

Solution 7 - Linux

I like the versatility of jEdit (http://www.jedit.org), its got a lot of plugins, crossplatform and has also stuff like block selection which I use all the time.

The downside is, because it is written in java, it is not the fastest one.

Solution 8 - Linux

I find Geany (http://geany.uvena.de/) quite good.

Solution 9 - Linux

I use pico or nano as my "casual" text editor in Linux/Solaris/etc. It's easy to come to grips with, and whilst you lose a couple of rows of text to the menu, at least it's easy to see how to exit, etc.

You can even extend nano, I think, and add syntax highlighting.

Solution 10 - Linux

Alternative text editors? Try [Diakonos][1], "a Linux editor for the masses". The default keyboard mapping is as expected for cut, copy, paste, undo, open, save, etc.

[1]: http://purepistos.net/diakonos "Diakonos"

Solution 11 - Linux

When I searched for TextMate alternative for Linux, I ended up using Geany. It's not as powerfull, but still nice to work with. Great replacement for Kate.

Solution 12 - Linux

On Mac OS X, I have used BBEdit since the early 1990's, so I use that as my reference for all other editors. I sometimes use BBEdit to edit files on a Linux box using ftp mode, and that works very well if you have a fast network connection to the Linux box.

I learned emacs two years ago because the rest of the programming team I joined uses it. I find emacs powerful but annoyingly old-fashioned in many ways, but once you have learned emacs, you can use it on any platform (Linux, OS X, Windows). This is the editor I use almost exclusively at work now. It is going to take me years to master all its features, though.

I have also used gedit on Linux and found it very usable, but I haven't tried to use it as my primary editor for any project.

I have a colleague at work who uses Komodo Edit 4.4 (free from activestate.com), running it on a Windows computer but using it in ftp mode so she can edit files on our Linux server. Komodo Edit has many nice features, but it takes a looonnnggg time to launch the first time.

Solution 13 - Linux

Don't forget NEdit! Small and light, but with syntax highlighting and macro record/replay.

Solution 14 - Linux

Best one besides Vi? Vim.

Solution 15 - Linux

Solution 16 - Linux

The best I've found is gedit unfortunately. Spend a few hours with it and you'll discover it's not so bad, with plugins and themes. You can use the command line to open documents in it.

Solution 17 - Linux

+1 for pico/nano -- lightweight, gets the job done, good help

Solution 18 - Linux

Friend of mine swears by jed, http://www.jedsoft.org/jed/

Solution 19 - Linux

First I don't want to start a war..

I haven't used TextMate but I have used its Windows equivalent, e-TextEditor and I could understand why people love it.

I've also tried many text editors and IDEs in my quest in finding the perfect text editor on Linux. I've tried jEdit, vim, emacs (although I used to love when I was at uni) and various others.

On Linux I've settled with gEdit. Although I do use Komodo Edit from time to time. When I'm in a hurry I use gEdit purely because it is quicker than Komodo Edit. gEdit has plenty of plugins and comes with some nice colour schemes. I reckon once gEdit has a proper code-tidy facility it'll be cool. I think the only reason I use Komodo Edit is the project file facility.

I have a friend who donated his 'Vi Improved' book in the hope that he can convert me to Vim. The book is over an inch thick and completely put me off in investing time in learning Vim..

Everytime I find an editor - I always find myself going back to gEdit. It is a frills-in-the-right-places editor. Give gEdit a go, it is the default text editor in Ubuntu and Linux Mint.

Here is a link to an excellent guide on how to get gEdit to look and behave (somewhat) like TextMate: http://grigio.org/pimp_my_gedit_was_textmate_linux

Hope that helps.

Solution 20 - Linux

I agree with Mike, though I'm a Vim die-hard. I've been using GEdit quite frequently lately when I'm doing lightweight Ruby scripting. The standard editor (plus Ruby code snippets) is extremely usable and polished, and can provide a nice reprieve from full-strength, always-on programming editors.

Solution 21 - Linux

I've just started using OSX. Free editors of note that I've discovered:

  • Komodo by ActiveState. No debugger or regex editor (although one comes with Python, i.e. redemo.py) in free version but perfectly usable.
  • ERIC, written in PyQT.
  • Eclipse with PyDev is my preferred option for editing Python on all platforms. Nice clean GUI, decent debugger. Good syntax parsing etc.

Solution 22 - Linux

I've used Emacs for 20 years. It's great and it works everywhere. I also have TextMate, which I use for some things on the Mac (HTML mode is great). If you want to do Ruby development, Netbeans supports Ruby and it also runs on all platforms.

http://www.netbeans.org/features/ruby/index.html

I've seen some blogs, etc claiming that it's the best Ruby environment available.

Solution 23 - Linux

I use joe for simple (and not so simple) editing when I'm away from Eclipse.

It uses the classic Wordstar keybindings- although I've never used Wordstar, it's a selling point for many people.

It's easy, well-supported, light-weight and it has binaries available for everything.

Solution 24 - Linux

I love Kate because it has several interesting features (already cited) usually found in (heavier) IDEs. My favorite feature, however, is its terminal window that is very practical for quickly performing the save-compile-execute combo.

Nedit is another valid option, packed with lots of features (and it hasn't lots of dependencies: that's a huge plus IMHO).

For editing in a shell, when I cannot use VIM, I look immediately for pico or nano (but I would not recommend them for continuous development: for rapid editing they are perfect).

Solution 25 - Linux

If it's just you? Use what you want to use today; switch in mid-stream if you want.

Is it a team? Try to be editor-agnostic. Set standards for white-space (are tabs allowed? How many spaces does a tab represent?), but otherwise allow anyone to use whichever editor they want.

Is it a team doing pair-programming? That's where you may need a team-standard editor, just so that programmers can easily pass the keyboard.

To help implement a standard white-space policy in a shop where one or more coders is using Emacs: You can tell Emacs about your white-space policy with some comments stuck at the bottom of every file source file. For example,

# Local Variables:
# tab-width: 2
# ruby-indent-level: 2
# indent-tabs-mode: nil
# End:

Anyone using emacs (or xemacs) on that file will automatically get the group standard indentation.

Solution 26 - Linux

Sublime Text 2 is my favorite. Intuitively understandable and quite powerful.

Solution 27 - Linux

You can try Emacs with ruby-mode, Rinari (for Rails) and yasnippet which provides automatic snippets like Textmate.

Solution 28 - Linux

I love TextMate on OSX.

There is a kind of TextMate clone for Windows called simply "E" (e-texteditor.com). Its author promised that there will be a Linux version soon. Even if you already picked your favourite, TextMate (or E) is worth a look, simply because it is different.

I would say that there are mainly four different families of text editors:

  • classic menubar-based editors like WinEdit, Gedit or BBEdit
  • Emacs and its brethren XEmacs, Aquamacs etc.
  • VI / Vim / Cream and the like
  • TextMate and E

You can differenciate between these families by their different paradigms of usage:

  • Classic editors rely mainly on a menubar and some Ctrl-key shortcuts.
  • Emacs-style editing uses highly sophisticated keyboard commands like C-x-s and even whole words to evoke commands.
  • VI is modebased and is operated by single-key commands or whole words.
  • TextMate is based on Snippets and classic shortcuts.

Emacs and TextMate are also easily extensible by user-created scripts in Lisp (Emacs) or any other command-line-language (TextMate). (Classic editors and VI are also extendable, but the effort is usually considerably bigger)

I would recommend that everyone tried at least one good example of each of these families (if possible) and find out what suits them best.

Solution 29 - Linux

TextMate is a great editor, and there is a way to replicate some of the functionality in GEdit. Check the article out here: <http://rubymm.blogspot.com/2007/08/make-gedit-behave-roughly-like-textmate.html> to modify GEdit to behave like TextMate.

Solution 30 - Linux

Vim is a nice upgrade for Vi, offering decent features and a more usable set of keybindings and default behaviour. However, graphical versions like GVim, KVim and even Cream are extremely lacking in my opinion. I've been using Geany a lot lately, but it also has its shortcomings.

I just can't find something in the league of Programmers Notepad, Smultron or TextMate on Linux. A shame, since I want to live in an all open source cyberworld, I'm stuck hopping from one almost-right editor to another.

Solution 31 - Linux

You could give bluefish a try. Has a bunch of nice features for website work. Syntax files for most every language.

http://bluefish.openoffice.nl/

If on windows give Crimson Editor a try http://www.crimsoneditor.com/ It's been a long while since I ran windows, but iirc, 'official' development has stopped on it, but the community has taken up a fork of it and called it emerald or somesuch. Crimson editor is still very capable as is.

Both bluefish and crimson editor have project management abilities. FTP ablilities, macros etc etc

Solution 32 - Linux

I personally use MacVim which is basically a GVim for Mac OSx. However I have been reading alot about Redcar, which is a text editor for Linux, which shares a lot of the Textmate functionality. Checkout the links below.

Redcar
LURG Lecture on Redcar

Solution 33 - Linux

I just thought I would recommend Ninja IDE, open source and all.. I use it for all my Python development now days when I got a GUI to work with and looks the same when I am on my Windows and Linux machines.

Ninja IDE

Solution 34 - Linux

for multiple tab text editor "medit" is the best . its like notepad++ in windows . for stylish and good looking "schite Text editor " is best .

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