![]() More useful than you’d think.ĭocuments within it are tabbed, so it makes for an awesome actual notepad. It has good line and space functions which help you do quick replacing like “delete all trailing spaces” and stuff like that. It also has a tag pairing feature which is handy for HTML because you can click on your beginning tag and see where the end tag is, which helps trap errors. It has an HTMLTidy feature which helps when trying to clean up other people’s HTML (cuz mine is never messy, yaknow). It has awesome find/replace capabilities including regex so I can easily do stuff like search for a pattern and replace it, or replace line breaks with commas or whatever. csv files because it’s just raw data (without the frame of Excel) which is what a machine would see and that helps me quickly and easily see where formatting errors might be. css etc etc (Web site files, basically) And most of those are color coded which means it makes your tags different color than text and that helps you read it better, and spot errors. Well it’s plain text so you can use it to edit anything that’s NOT a Word doc such as. ![]() ), the corresponding LEFT symbol ( flashes so I see that I haven’t left one out in between or if there’s no match, it flashes the whole screen momentarily to warn me. When I type a trailing right parenthesis or bracket, e.g. I’m a Mac person so I use TextWrangler for simple stuff and BBEdit for the bigger projects. You can open a one-million-word text document in less time than it takes Microsoft Word to oblige you wiht the “Open File…” dialog, do a search in it for a character string and have it return to you a list of every occurrence of that char string and enough of the surrounding text to understand the context at a glance, and it does it very very fast.Īlso blistering fast compared to a word processor for doing Replace operations, and can take complex instructions for the replace.įor coding, text editors usually will highlight different parts of the code (they recognize most common coding languages) so you can see the syntax visually as you type it. A word processor does some fancy things well but it is most definitely not an all-purpose device for handling text. Word processor is to text editor what food processor is to knife. Can you explain to me what one would use something like this for? What’s the advantage of such a thing over, say, opening a Word doc?
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