pulsar
sublime_text
pulsar | sublime_text | |
---|---|---|
91 | 279 | |
2,950 | 793 | |
1.6% | 0.0% | |
9.9 | 0.0 | |
3 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
JavaScript | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
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.
pulsar
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Show HN: Open-source alternatives to tools You pay for
You may be thinking of Pulsar (<https://pulsar-edit.dev/>)?
- Python Text Editor
- Armed with a big ol' can of Raid: Pulsar 1.110.0 is available now!
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Open-Source Washing
> VSCodium is not "designed" to be less functional, since it is a project maintained by developers who are unaffiliated with Microsoft.
In today's (OSS) world, employment or affiliation doesn't matter much. Microsoft can propose what they want and get what they want from the project, at the end of the day. I don't think these independent maintainers have power to say "No" (if a VSCodium developer can chime in here, I'd love to be stand corrected), or they risk VSCodium to be forked to VSCodiumX, by developers who are friendlier to the megacorp which loves Linux.
Yes, VSCodium is a node to Chromium. "-ium" has a ring akin to "-ish" in today's conjecture. Freemium - Free-ish but not. Chromium - Chrome-ish but not. VSCodium - VSCode-ish, but not. This might be curse in the naming, but it feels like that, at least for me.
The blog post I linked quotes a tweet which supports what I'm saying, heck even the blog post does a much better job of detailing what I was trying to say here in my previous comments.
To circle back, the problem with -ium projects are, they are effectively banned from participating in the main ecosystem which drives these projects forward, and to be in "The Ecosystem", you need to use the closed source versions with pervasive data collection and whatnot. Heck, even Google abuses Chromium with "Experiments and Proposals", which they use to politely yet forcefully push the web to the places they want. VSCodium is the same getaway drug and test vessel for Microsoft.
Lure with Open Source version, trap with closed source version for "Full Benefits" (for the company, because user is the product).
> You're entitled to your own opinion, but Atom was developed by GitHub...
Yes & yes.
> which was acquired by Microsoft.
Yes.
> It doesn't help that Atom was discontinued last year, with the final version having been released in March 2022
However, it's forked as Pulsar [0], which I meant by "current form" in my previous comment. Again, it's MIT licensed, and that's not my favorite, but at least it's not a company editor now.
Atom's original developers started to build Zed, which is worst of both worlds currently (Open source with a closed backend, plus "All your data belong to us" clause).
At the end of the day, from my perspective "-ium" projects and their sanitized versions are just open-core versions of the "main tools" developed from them.
Just because these versions somehow work, and have a permissive license doesn't make them open source in the meta sense. Pedantically they are open source software, yes, but they are just the "Open Core" or Demo/Shareware versions of the tools which companies use to strange to ecosystems.
This is just enshittification of open source in my eyes.
More power to you if you're happy with the -ium tools, but I'd rather use truly free software (Like Eclipse), or use completely honest closed source software (like BBEdit), instead of using tools designed to look like open source but not.
[0]: https://pulsar-edit.dev/
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Chime – Capable. Focused. Fast. An open source editor for macOS
I thought spiritual successor to Atom is Pulsar. https://github.com/pulsar-edit/pulsar
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Help: Atom Alternatives/Copy-Pasting Scripts
Pulsar has a TTS package, for those who were very comfortable in Atom.
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Libre-friendly IDEs?
In addition to the already mentioned Emacs, I would check Pulsar, the Atom successor.
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Im new to lua, what are the best Lua IDE?
Community-led fork of Atom
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Clarification question
Also, don't worry - we understand that there's documentation lacking on the "extend Pulsar" part and on package creation, but we're working on it. We're also working on better ways to test, document, and create packages (and grammars - see, for example, how we usually tested grammars in the past and how we're migrating to for example), so it's just a matter of time, really.
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Best FOSS text editor like atom?
Our website is https://pulsar-edit.dev/, feel free to check out or Discord server if you want to come and say hi or have any questions - we are a friendly bunch.
sublime_text
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scrape-yahoo-finance
Sublime Text: Sublime Text is a lightweight and fast text editor known for its speed and simplicity. It offers a wide range of plugins and customization options, making it suitable for Python development when paired with the right plugins.
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NotepadNext – a cross-platform, reimplementation of Notepad++
Sublime is a massive improvement in my opinion, and cross platform. It's not free but you can use a personal license at work and on multiple machines.
https://www.sublimetext.com/
- Free Resources Every Web Developer Should Know About
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From Beginner to Master: The Path to Becoming a PHP Guru
Starting with PHP can feel like navigating through fog, with complex syntax making you feel lost in a maze of code. This phase requires you to learn the basics of the PHP language, deeply understanding its syntax, features, and design patterns, including variables, data types, functions, classes and objects, namespaces, etc. From variables to classes, progressively deepen your understanding of PHP's core knowledge. It's advisable to combine the official PHP documentation and online tutorials to build a solid foundation. Resources and tools to consider: PHP official documentation, PHP manual, online tutorials, PHPStorm, and other Integrated Development Environments (IDEs). Consider practicing basic coding with PHPStorm and Sublime Text.
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Building a syntax highlighting extension for VS Code
The format of the test files themselves is inspired by the relatively new initiative by the Sublime Text team when they introduced a new grammar file format called Sublime Syntax and – more importantly – a way to unit test grammars. It’s using some lovely human-friendly magic comments that allow to specify what scopes should the grammar file produce for a given position on a given line.
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100+ FREE Resources Every Web Developer Must Try
Sublime Text
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A list of SaaS, PaaS and IaaS offerings that have free tiers of interest to devops and infradev
Sublime Text - Sublime Text is a popular, versatile, and highly customizable text editor used for coding and text editing tasks.
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The Best Web Development Tools to Improve Your Workflow
Sublime Text: A versatile and lightweight code editor (it’s my favorite code editor).
- Sublime Text 4 won't fix EOL/vulnerable OpenSSL and Python versions
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I shamefully paid for Sublime Text
i would consider buying if they stop shipping eol software. they ship py3.3 which is eol of 10 years! seems like a wont fix too
https://github.com/sublimehq/sublime_text/issues/5984
What are some alternatives?
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
lite-xl - A lightweight text editor written in Lua
hydrogen - :atom: Run code interactively, inspect data, and plot. All the power of Jupyter kernels, inside your favorite text editor.
micro-editor - A modern and intuitive terminal-based text editor
CotEditor - Lightweight Plain-Text Editor for macOS
vscodium - binary releases of VS Code without MS branding/telemetry/licensing
alt-tab-macos - Windows alt-tab on macOS
Launch.nvim - 🚀 Launch.nvim is modular starter for Neovim.
TextMate - TextMate is a graphical text editor for macOS 10.12 or later
Atom - :atom: The hackable text editor
breach-parse - A tool for parsing breached passwords