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Atom 1.1 Is Out, With Lots of Graphic Improvements (blog.atom.io)

yathosho writes with some good news for GitHub developers: GitHub's new Atom editor sees a first big update in version 1.1. Character measurement has been improved, fonts with ligatures and variable width fonts are now supported. The biggest new feature is probably live Markdown preview, matching the current theme. There's also a 1.2.0 beta available, for those who want to have a look into Atom's future.

5 of 103 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Not really open source by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yeah, lame product that's not open source. Here are some the features they are touting for the latest release, see which ones of these make you want to pay for a closed-source editor:

    * Reduced GC Pauses When Scrolling Editor
    * Using Variable Width Fonts
    * New Approach to Character Measurement
    * Several Find and Replace Fixes
    * Settings Have Nice Descriptions

    They're not really selling me on it. Incidentally, when I read the headline, I thought it meant that Intel's Atom processor had been given a GPU.

    --
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  2. Re:Can it debug? by spauldo · · Score: 3, Informative

    I can't comment on Atom (or Xcode, for that matter).

    I can comment on UNIX-based editors and IDEs, though.

    There's Eclipse's C/C++ module. It runs fine on Linux.

    Emacs might suit your needs as well, but getting it set up with all the bells and whistles of an IDE is a bit of a pain. There are projects that help with that, however, like spacemacs (defaults to vi keybindings, but supports emacs keybindings as well). I use emacs with a custom config, but I haven't done much C++ since I switched from vim. What I have done has worked OK, but I'm sure my config has room for improvement.

    QT Creator is cross platform and supports C++. It can do non-QT projects just fine.

    There's Anjuta and KDevelop as well, but I haven't used either of those in quite some time and have no idea what the status is. KDevelop used to be used quite a bit for KDE development, which is C++.

    --
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  3. Re:wtf.. by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 3, Informative

    wtf is atom?

    A somewhat rudimentary slashvertised text editor that reports what you're doing back to Google.

  4. Re:Not really open source by Lennie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seems your information from 2014 is not relevant any more, supposedly they open sourced all of it in May this year:

    http://blog.atom.io/2014/05/06...

    --
    New things are always on the horizon
  5. Why Atom? by mwvdlee · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm still wonder why I'd ever want to use Atom.
    Sure, it has some nice things in it, but it's still nowhere even remotely close to other programmers' editors.
    Nor does it seem to offer anything that could significantly improve on those editors or that would be in any way harder to implement on those editors.
    What is so special about Atom and why are Github pushing it so much?

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