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  3. Notepad++ and programmer's editors

Notepad++ and programmer's editors

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  • C Christopher Duncan

    I've been hauling around my trusty Codewright long after its commercial demise because I have it wired up just the way I like it. However, other viable alternatives that I know of in terms of horsepower are Multi Edit and Visual Slick Edit. I mention this because a guy I know who's just getting into some html / javascript coding (and doesn't use Visual Studio of any stripe) is using Notepad++. I was talking to him about the importance of having good tools. After visiting their home page I'm simply not sure if Notepad++ is just a bit more powerful than Notepad or it's a true programmer's editor in its own right and an equal to all the other ones (both mentioned and not mentioned). Anyone here have enough experience with it to offer comparisons?

    Christopher Duncan
    www.PracticalUSA.com
    Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes
    Copywriting Services

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    Jwalant Natvarlal Soneji
    wrote on last edited by
    #26

    I have used UltraEdit, Notepad++ and PSPad; and personally felt Notepad++ and PSPad good, cause they are free and open for plug-ins. Definitly the robustness of UltraEdit is comendable.

    SQL.NET

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    • C Christopher Duncan

      I've been hauling around my trusty Codewright long after its commercial demise because I have it wired up just the way I like it. However, other viable alternatives that I know of in terms of horsepower are Multi Edit and Visual Slick Edit. I mention this because a guy I know who's just getting into some html / javascript coding (and doesn't use Visual Studio of any stripe) is using Notepad++. I was talking to him about the importance of having good tools. After visiting their home page I'm simply not sure if Notepad++ is just a bit more powerful than Notepad or it's a true programmer's editor in its own right and an equal to all the other ones (both mentioned and not mentioned). Anyone here have enough experience with it to offer comparisons?

      Christopher Duncan
      www.PracticalUSA.com
      Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes
      Copywriting Services

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      da808z
      wrote on last edited by
      #27

      TextPAD rocks! If you're going to do ASP.NET or ASP however, Visual Studio 2008 Express is free and does the tips while typing thing. I don't know any free/shareware stuff that does tips while typing for PHP etc. My workplace has DreamWeaver which can do it for html/css while typing, but it costs $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$.

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      • C Christopher Duncan

        I've been hauling around my trusty Codewright long after its commercial demise because I have it wired up just the way I like it. However, other viable alternatives that I know of in terms of horsepower are Multi Edit and Visual Slick Edit. I mention this because a guy I know who's just getting into some html / javascript coding (and doesn't use Visual Studio of any stripe) is using Notepad++. I was talking to him about the importance of having good tools. After visiting their home page I'm simply not sure if Notepad++ is just a bit more powerful than Notepad or it's a true programmer's editor in its own right and an equal to all the other ones (both mentioned and not mentioned). Anyone here have enough experience with it to offer comparisons?

        Christopher Duncan
        www.PracticalUSA.com
        Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes
        Copywriting Services

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        Flynn Arrowstarr Regular Schmoe
        wrote on last edited by
        #28

        I generally use PFE[^] for all-purpose file editing and reading. Of course, PFE hasn't been updated since 1999, but it works great even in Windows 7 64-bit. The main feature I like is it remembers where you left off in a file. Great for my game walkthrough files and general text editing (no syntax highlighting or Intellisense). For scripting (JavaScript/VBScript, PHP, etc.) I use SourceEdit[^]. No project management features or Intellisense, but lots of syntax highlighters are available. Both are free and work for everything I need. For anything heavy-duty, I use Visual Studio Express. :-\ Flynn

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        • C Christopher Duncan

          I've been hauling around my trusty Codewright long after its commercial demise because I have it wired up just the way I like it. However, other viable alternatives that I know of in terms of horsepower are Multi Edit and Visual Slick Edit. I mention this because a guy I know who's just getting into some html / javascript coding (and doesn't use Visual Studio of any stripe) is using Notepad++. I was talking to him about the importance of having good tools. After visiting their home page I'm simply not sure if Notepad++ is just a bit more powerful than Notepad or it's a true programmer's editor in its own right and an equal to all the other ones (both mentioned and not mentioned). Anyone here have enough experience with it to offer comparisons?

          Christopher Duncan
          www.PracticalUSA.com
          Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes
          Copywriting Services

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          Mike Winiberg
          wrote on last edited by
          #29

          I use SLickedit (in Brief mode, natch 8) ). I'm - very slowly - trying to fix the netbeans IDE so that it can be configured for Brief mode, and then I will probably go over to that entirely for Java/PHP/C++ on non-windows platforms, but stick with Slickedit, as Visual Studio's editor makes punched cards look efficient (and yes, I have used punched cards, and paper tape...)

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          • C Christopher Duncan

            I've been hauling around my trusty Codewright long after its commercial demise because I have it wired up just the way I like it. However, other viable alternatives that I know of in terms of horsepower are Multi Edit and Visual Slick Edit. I mention this because a guy I know who's just getting into some html / javascript coding (and doesn't use Visual Studio of any stripe) is using Notepad++. I was talking to him about the importance of having good tools. After visiting their home page I'm simply not sure if Notepad++ is just a bit more powerful than Notepad or it's a true programmer's editor in its own right and an equal to all the other ones (both mentioned and not mentioned). Anyone here have enough experience with it to offer comparisons?

            Christopher Duncan
            www.PracticalUSA.com
            Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes
            Copywriting Services

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            U Offline
            User 2966909
            wrote on last edited by
            #30

            I use ViM. It's simple, it's fast, it's scriptable, it's flexible, it's powerful, it's geek, it's cool, it's everywhere and it's charityware. The only problem is you need to learn a bit. But anything aside is just a toy.

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            • C Christopher Duncan

              I've been hauling around my trusty Codewright long after its commercial demise because I have it wired up just the way I like it. However, other viable alternatives that I know of in terms of horsepower are Multi Edit and Visual Slick Edit. I mention this because a guy I know who's just getting into some html / javascript coding (and doesn't use Visual Studio of any stripe) is using Notepad++. I was talking to him about the importance of having good tools. After visiting their home page I'm simply not sure if Notepad++ is just a bit more powerful than Notepad or it's a true programmer's editor in its own right and an equal to all the other ones (both mentioned and not mentioned). Anyone here have enough experience with it to offer comparisons?

              Christopher Duncan
              www.PracticalUSA.com
              Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes
              Copywriting Services

              S Offline
              S Offline
              Sami P
              wrote on last edited by
              #31

              Try Sublime Text, you won't regret it. The way it handles multiple selections and the ease of creating plugins (through a simple python API) makes it the best tool in my setup, by far.

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              • L Lost User

                Notepad2 is the best replacement ever for windows notepad. But, like you, it does not compare with NP++ But, I think we cant compare them, the target of use is very different, I like notepad2 to read logs, write text files, make some fast modification to source files, etc, but np++ comes better for scripting languages and files with a lot of lines of code. The plugin interface is very simple, I made a plugin for our source control system very easily, and there are a lot of usefulls plugins on the web, one that comes to my mind now is FunctionList, not very stable, but very very usefull, NppNetNote was another plugin that I found funny and usefull too. I've got both of them on my computer, and I am always using both

                Saludos!! ____Juan

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                Hardik Varma
                wrote on last edited by
                #32

                I've tried using both simultaneously in the past, and NP++ surpasses NP2 in every aspect for any task that I've thrown at the two of them (including reading plaintext files).

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                • C Christopher Duncan

                  I've been hauling around my trusty Codewright long after its commercial demise because I have it wired up just the way I like it. However, other viable alternatives that I know of in terms of horsepower are Multi Edit and Visual Slick Edit. I mention this because a guy I know who's just getting into some html / javascript coding (and doesn't use Visual Studio of any stripe) is using Notepad++. I was talking to him about the importance of having good tools. After visiting their home page I'm simply not sure if Notepad++ is just a bit more powerful than Notepad or it's a true programmer's editor in its own right and an equal to all the other ones (both mentioned and not mentioned). Anyone here have enough experience with it to offer comparisons?

                  Christopher Duncan
                  www.PracticalUSA.com
                  Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes
                  Copywriting Services

                  M Offline
                  M Offline
                  mrt_doulaty
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #33

                  I'm using it as an editor for typesetting TeX and LaTeX documents. It is better than any other editor for TeX, including commercial ones, like WinEdit.

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                  • C Christopher Duncan

                    I've been hauling around my trusty Codewright long after its commercial demise because I have it wired up just the way I like it. However, other viable alternatives that I know of in terms of horsepower are Multi Edit and Visual Slick Edit. I mention this because a guy I know who's just getting into some html / javascript coding (and doesn't use Visual Studio of any stripe) is using Notepad++. I was talking to him about the importance of having good tools. After visiting their home page I'm simply not sure if Notepad++ is just a bit more powerful than Notepad or it's a true programmer's editor in its own right and an equal to all the other ones (both mentioned and not mentioned). Anyone here have enough experience with it to offer comparisons?

                    Christopher Duncan
                    www.PracticalUSA.com
                    Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes
                    Copywriting Services

                    C Offline
                    C Offline
                    Charles Keepax
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #34

                    Personally, I have always favoured Notepad++ and Ultraedit; they are both great editors. Lately I have been getting into Vim and finding it quite awesome. The learning curve is a nightmare, but its shaping up to be quite powerful. Still haven't decided if I would make it my go to editor yet though.

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                    • C Christopher Duncan

                      I've been hauling around my trusty Codewright long after its commercial demise because I have it wired up just the way I like it. However, other viable alternatives that I know of in terms of horsepower are Multi Edit and Visual Slick Edit. I mention this because a guy I know who's just getting into some html / javascript coding (and doesn't use Visual Studio of any stripe) is using Notepad++. I was talking to him about the importance of having good tools. After visiting their home page I'm simply not sure if Notepad++ is just a bit more powerful than Notepad or it's a true programmer's editor in its own right and an equal to all the other ones (both mentioned and not mentioned). Anyone here have enough experience with it to offer comparisons?

                      Christopher Duncan
                      www.PracticalUSA.com
                      Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes
                      Copywriting Services

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                      Nagy Vilmos
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #35

                      I use notepad++ day in, day out. You'll need to get it configured to suit you, but it is not a hard chore. Once you have it set up it is a very good code editor, WITH NO INTELISENSE! Woo hoo!


                      Panic, Chaos, Destruction. My work here is done. or "Drink. Get drunk. Fall over." - P O'H

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                      • C Christopher Duncan

                        I've been hauling around my trusty Codewright long after its commercial demise because I have it wired up just the way I like it. However, other viable alternatives that I know of in terms of horsepower are Multi Edit and Visual Slick Edit. I mention this because a guy I know who's just getting into some html / javascript coding (and doesn't use Visual Studio of any stripe) is using Notepad++. I was talking to him about the importance of having good tools. After visiting their home page I'm simply not sure if Notepad++ is just a bit more powerful than Notepad or it's a true programmer's editor in its own right and an equal to all the other ones (both mentioned and not mentioned). Anyone here have enough experience with it to offer comparisons?

                        Christopher Duncan
                        www.PracticalUSA.com
                        Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes
                        Copywriting Services

                        M Offline
                        M Offline
                        MannatWork
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #36

                        I've been using Multi-Edit since before Windows - I'm actually still using a pre Win95 16-bit version :-\ and except for Visual Studio I have managed to stay pretty much ignorant of other editors. Having said that, I think it's the bee's knees, but of course, this old version is really showing its age. Even at that, the worst thing I can say about it is that an upgrade to the current version would cost $200 (essentially the new purchase price). The other thing is that it's strictly a Windows program. I've wondered about Jedit, which looks like it might have a lot in common with Multi-Edit, including a built-in macro language, but is available cross-platform. I could be tempted into using a program that works the same under both Windows and Mac OSX. Plus, it's even open-source and free. I just haven't had the motivation and time to dig into it. One big red flag for me with Jedit is is that it's written in Java, and most Java apps I've used exhibit some behaviors which are very jarring for a long-time Windows user (who hates having to reach for the mouse when editing text). Does anyone have any informed opinions on Jedit or any other similar cross-platform programmer's editors?

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                        • K KoosFourie

                          I Agree, UltraEdit is by far the best editor available. It is the best piece of software I have ever spend some money on.

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                          davidh1968
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #37

                          Another vote for UltraEdit. Wonderful multi-programming-language tool. Great for simple text file viewing/editing on up to projects, development, custom highlighting, etc. They constantly add features yet responsiveness rarely diminishes. I paid for the "lifetime upgrade" years ago and have never regretted it nor looked back. -David

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                          • C Christopher Duncan

                            I've been hauling around my trusty Codewright long after its commercial demise because I have it wired up just the way I like it. However, other viable alternatives that I know of in terms of horsepower are Multi Edit and Visual Slick Edit. I mention this because a guy I know who's just getting into some html / javascript coding (and doesn't use Visual Studio of any stripe) is using Notepad++. I was talking to him about the importance of having good tools. After visiting their home page I'm simply not sure if Notepad++ is just a bit more powerful than Notepad or it's a true programmer's editor in its own right and an equal to all the other ones (both mentioned and not mentioned). Anyone here have enough experience with it to offer comparisons?

                            Christopher Duncan
                            www.PracticalUSA.com
                            Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes
                            Copywriting Services

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                            J Offline
                            John Perryn
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #38

                            TEXTPAD has the lot... http://www.textpad.com/

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