NotepadNext
Geany
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NotepadNext | Geany | |
---|---|---|
27 | 90 | |
7,216 | 2,965 | |
- | 1.5% | |
8.9 | 9.2 | |
12 days ago | about 5 hours ago | |
C++ | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
NotepadNext
- What kind of applications are missing from the Linux ecosystem?
- Alternative do Notepad++ on linux
- Thinking of switching from Windows 11 to Linux Mint.
- Wine 8.0
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An alternative for "Notepad++"
There's NotepadNext (https://github.com/dail8859/NotepadNext), it's fairly new and based on Notepad++, personally, at the moment I use Atom.
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Trying to find a good text editor
Or alternatively there is a cross-platform project here that attempts to remake Notepad++ but as cross platform (Notepad Next).
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CudaText: Open-source, cross-platform text editor, written in Lazarus
https://github.com/dail8859/NotepadNext
> And finally, it's always great to see Lazarus software, it's one of the nicer ways to create GUI software and largely sidesteps some of the framework related issues that other languages face...
The insanity involved around hating on Object Pascal is just a damn shame. Lazarus is fantastic, for the desktop. And so are a lot of software projects created with Lazarus. The few gripes that I have with the project, is the very odd refusal to fully embrace mobile development.
They have a kind of half-way solution, for just Android and not iOS, from an independent developer not on the Lazarus team and who they seem to want to keep at an arm's length. I don't know if Embarcadero (Delphi) is paying them to not touch mobile development, but it's quite weird that they don't want to go in that very obvious direction. Lazarus as a complete solution for both the desktop and mobile, would have people shook. However, the clock is ticking, because there are a number of more comprehensive desktop and mobile development solutions coming. Lazarus should have and arguably could have come out with their combined solution years ago.
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Notepad++ - Unhappy Users' Edition
Check out Notepad Next for Linux. Everyone is talking about Notepadqq but in my experience it seems to be outdated and not feature complete. I enjoy Notepad Next much more.
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Notepad++ alternative with "Find All in Opened Documents" for Linux
How about notepad++ for nix? https://github.com/dail8859/NotepadNext
Geany
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Geany 2.0 Is Out
right on the main page, there is a screenshot. If you click it, it takes you to more screenshots.
Open https://www.geany.org/ in a web browser like chrome or firefox
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Whatβs an free bare bones IDE for Python that works smoothly out of the box?
When I installed my IDE I just wanted something lightweight, so I went with Geany. I've been using it for years without trouble.
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What lightweight and open source Python IDEs would you recommend (if any) for Linux?
Link: https://www.geany.org/
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Scintilla is a free source code editing component with a permissive license
Take a look at Geany https://www.geany.org/ which uses scintilla under the hood and is blisteringly fast and lightweight and plugin friendly as well as FOSS.
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A distro for 12 year old laptops
AntiX is definitely going to be the fastest of the recommendations here. I have it on a Core Duo with 2G Ram and I am really a very big fan of that distro. It is all there, sometimes it takes a bit of time to get use to its quirks, but it is worth powering through. You have the option of three lightweight window managers and then there are two file managers that are used to give you some desktop functionality. Take some time to learn which one of those options you like the best. Here is a screenshot of my setup after fiddling with it a bit. For a lighter weight text editor/IDE check out Geany.
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CLion vs VSCode in 2023 for C++
Another FAST editor -- they call it a mini IDE -- for C++ and a bunch of other languages is Geany https://www.geany.org/
- It's the 9th anniversary of Geany not fixing C function highlighting. Join me in appreciating the utter state of FOSS. πππ
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Bash script help
I did copy-paste your fenced code into an editor (geany). Some of the indentations use tabulators, other explicit spaces. I recommend to stick either with one, or the other. Note, good editors allow you to use the tabulator key and -- on the fly the editor inserts (an adjustable number of) explicit spaces into the source code. In case of geany, this is available from the GUI via Edit -> Preferences, then Editor -> Indentation. Get in touch with your peers/colleagues, and adjust this accordingly (e.g., 2, 3, 4 spaces per tabulator key/indentation level; frequently either 2, or 4). Once if you all agree on a format in common, exchange, maintenance and collaboration (think e.g., GitLab/GitBucket/GitHub) is going to be considerably easier. (No, I don't know if there is bash code reformatter as e.g., fprettify for Fortran, yapf/black for Python [where indentation actually is functional], or rubocop for Ruby.)
- Name a program that doesn't get enough love!
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rip atom and fuck microsoft (vs code is kinda nice tbh doe)
I wonder what the Geany developers think about posts like this?
What are some alternatives?
thonny - Python IDE for beginners
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
Atom - :atom: The hackable text editor
GNU Emacs - Mirror of GNU Emacs
KDevelop - Cross-platform IDE for C, C++, Python, QML/JavaScript and PHP
Notepad3 - Notepad like text editor based on the Scintilla source code. Notepad3 based on code from Notepad2 and MiniPath on code from metapath. Download Notepad3:
Vim - The official Vim repository
notepadqq - A simple, general-purpose editor for Linux
notepad-plus-plus - Notepad++ official repository
Nano
Brackets - An open source code editor for the web, written in JavaScript, HTML and CSS.