Mousepad is my daily driver for all my quick notes
- vis
vim/nvim was bloated 4 my use case, but ví wasn't enough. I like minimal and suck less.
Haven't seen anyone mention the Zed Text Editor yet. It's only available on MacOS as of now, but I've tried it out a bit and once it's more mature (and available on other OSes), I might switch over from Sublime Text. It's got a similar speed as Sublime, but with LSP, vim emulation and collaboration features built in, whereas in Sublime I need to install packages to achieve the same. Also made by the same people who originally made Atom and Treesitter.
I also want to mention Onivim. Unfortunately, development has stopped, so it's not really a viable option anymore, but I loved the idea. The idea was to make a vscode/vim hybrid. To that extend, it's written in Reason which allowed them to support vscode extensions, thus they didn't have to create their own extension ecosystem, while still being faster than electron. As for the vim part, the entire editor could be controlled with a keyboard. They had a global shortcut to go into a "UI move mode" so to say, which allowed you to go to every single piece of UI you had on screen. Thus they were able to copy the vscode UI, but still be keyboard-only. It was a surprisingly effective idea, so I hope some people can revive it someday.
I wish gnome-builder had a better vim-mode, I would use it more often over VSCode.
Linux:
- Kate
- Xed
Windows:
- Kate
- Notepad
- Notepad++
Joe - just for quick edits on a text file
For terminal; micro
is nano but sane and easier to use.
For GUI; Kate
is so incredible at any task I need. Note taking, to scripting, to planning out a small post online, it does the work easily.
I'm using ed for small edits when I know exactly that only a certain line needs to be deleted, or a word changed.
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Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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