Editors Software
An editor program allows the user to create and modify simple text files. This is as opposed to a word processor program which usually allows formatting, fonts, italics, and other stylistic devices intended to look better when printed out - an editor is simply designed to edit text. Because of this, editors are often used to write computer programs, configuration files, web pages, and other technical files that are read by other computer programs, not only by people.
Top: Computers: Software: Editors
See Also:
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Epsilon - Lugaru Software's EMACS-style programmer's editor for Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, DOS and OS/2. [Commercial]
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Visual SlickEdit - Programmer's editor for developing and maintaining software. Includes tools to automate the process of comprehending, navigating and analyzing source code. A full functioning 30 day trial version is available. [Windows and UNIX]
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A Tale of Five Editors - Eric Raymond analyzes the designs and implementations of five Unix text editors.
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SEDIT from Treehouse Software - Emulates the look and feel of mainframe editors like XEDIT and PDF on Unix and Windows. [Commercial]
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Softpanorama University Open Source Editors Webliography - Annotated list of editors with special emphasis on Xedit/Kedit/THE family and TCL-based editors.
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VEDIT - Editor for text, data, and binary files of up to 2 gigabytes in ASCII, Hex, EBCDIC. [Commercial]
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Comparison of Text Editors - A basic feature comparison for several text editors.
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Source Edit - A free code editor that supports most of the common computer languages out there.
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KEDIT - An XEDIT-compatible text editor for Windows 95/98/NT from the Mansfield Software Group. [Commercial]
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Editors Sucks-Rules-O-Meter - Reports which editor is more loved and which is more hated according to the WWW as reported by AltaVista. Devoted to the sacred religious wars on the "your editor sucks, my editor rules" subject traditionally coming up every now and then in
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Colorforth Editor - A description of the colorforth source editor.
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ACME - Acme is a textual user interface for programmers by Rob Pike for Plan 9, with ports to Unix-like and Windows systems. [Open Source]
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