I purchased a license for Sublime a few years ago, when I seriously thought that the way forward for me was to continue working in IT. That didn’t play out, so I’m now free to expunge one more piece of proprietary software from my life.
I’ve spent literally years at a time with modal text editors as a job requirement, and I know that I just don’t work well with them. This is not to say that Vim and Emacs are anything less than excellent. This is a me problem and not a them problem.
The editors I’ve found that have worked best for me in the past are probably Textmate and Sublime. Notepad++ runs a close third, and there is a Linux port these days!
The one thing I will not do is Electron-based editors. Besides the enormous resource usage of having a browser instance fired up for them, I’ve had malware try to coopt the JS backends of Electron text editors in the past. (On an interesting short-term contract gig cleaning malware out of websites.) It’s left me pretty gunshy, and I don’t need extra stress.
I’ve been down the lists of editors at certain wikis, and experimented with several of them. Kate seems like the best GUI editor and Micro seems like the best terminal-based editor.
However, I’ve been living in a relative vacuum on this subject for more than a decade and would appreciate others’ opinions.
Zed, VSCode If you like Vim, try Helix
VS Code and its open sourced equivalent Code, are both excellent editors
I haven’t used it but Zed seems like what you might be looking for.
Here’s what I know:
- Open Source
- Runs natively on Mac and Linux (no Windows support yet)
- Made by the same folks who made Atom
It’s a little new but It looks like it’s worth a try
Zed’s web page seems to come down pretty heavily on the pro-LLM side of things. Do you know if that can be toggled off or not?
It seems all AI stuff happens through the “Assistant Panel” and nothing is sent as long as you don’t interact with it.
It seems you can disable the assistant feature it is opt-out though
I vote Kate
Well, uh, mine is Kate. Not sure, if you need much selling on that, then.
I use it with an LSP server to provide highlighting and refactorings for Rust. Other languages are available.
The project-wide search & replace feature is really useful. It’s available from the bottom bar.
In the settings, you can activate the “Filesystem Browser” plugin, which I sometimes prefer compared to the Projects view or the Documents view.
You can search for features with Ctrl+Alt+i.
In general, though, it’s lightweight and easy to use. It’s not going to win an award for a riveting new usage concept, which is why I like it.