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  2. Visual Studio Code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_Studio_Code

    Visual Studio Code. Visual Studio Code, also commonly referred to as VS Code, [9] is a source-code editor developed by Microsoft for Windows, Linux, macOS and web browsers. [10] [11] Features include support for debugging, syntax highlighting, intelligent code completion, snippets, code refactoring, and embedded version control with Git.

  3. List of Microsoft codenames - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Microsoft_codenames

    Visual Studio designer for building Windows Presentation Foundation applications, meant to be used by application developers Monaco Monaco Editor In-browser IDE for Visual Studio. Monaco powers Visual Studio Code.

  4. Comparison of text editors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_text_editors

    Single document window splitting: window can be split to simultaneously view different areas of a file. MDI: Overlappable windows: each opened document gets its own fully movable window inside the editor environment. MDI: Tabbed document interface: multiple documents can be viewed as tabs in a single window.

  5. SlickEdit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SlickEdit

    SlickEdit, previously known as Visual SlickEdit, is a cross-platform commercial source code editor, text editor, and Integrated Development Environment developed by SlickEdit, Inc. SlickEdit has integrated debuggers for GNU C/C++, Java, WinDbg, Clang C/C++ LLDB, Groovy, Google Go, Python, Perl, Ruby, Scala, PHP, Xcode, and Android JVM/NDK.

  6. Sublime Text - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sublime_Text

    Sublime Text is a shareware text and source code editor available for Windows, macOS, and Linux. It natively supports many programming languages and markup languages. Users can customize it with themes and expand its functionality with plugins, typically community-built and maintained under free-software licenses.

  7. Scintilla (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scintilla_(software)

    Scinterm is a version of Scintilla for the curses text user interface. It is written by the developer of the Textadept editor. Scinterm uses Unicode characters to support some of Scintilla's graphically oriented features, but some Scintilla features are missing because of the terminal environment's constraints. [5]

  8. List of text editors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_text_editors

    The text editor in DR DOS 3.31 through DR DOS 6.0, and the predecessor of EDIT. Proprietary: EDLIN: A command-line based line editor introduced with 86-DOS, and the default on MS-DOS prior to version 5 and is also available on MS-DOS 5.0 and Windows NT. Proprietary: ee Stands for Easy Editor, is part of the base system of FreeBSD, along with vi.

  9. Wikipedia:Tools/Editing tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Tools/Editing_tools

    wikEd is a full-featured, in-browser text editor that adds enhanced text processing functions to Wikipedia and other MediaWiki edit pages (currently Mozilla, Firefox, SeaMonkey, Safari, and Chrome only). Features include: Pasting formatted text, e.g. from MS-Word (including tables)