TextWrangler 2.0 Freely Available 83
Newly released TextWrangler 2.0 is now free (as in beer). TextWrangler is a stripped-down version of the popular BBEdit text editor. TextWrangler has switched identities since 1.0, from being a text editor with an indeterminant purpose to a subset of BBEdit, a BBEdit Lite on steroids. It handles syntax coloring, scripting tools (perl, python, shell), and some Xcode integration. It does not include some of BBEdit's more advanced features like source control, CodeWarrior integration, glossaries, and creating text factories (though it can run existing saved factories). BBEdit remains $200, and TextWrangler still qualifies for BBEdit's $130 cross-upgrade price. Previous purchasers of TextWrangler qualify for a store credit (they will be notified via e-mail).
Mac only (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Mac only (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Mac only (Score:1)
Does everyone know it is Mac only? (Score:2)
Yes, many people would know from the article that the software is Mac only. However, not every one would know. The article would have been clearer if the two words "Mac only" had been included.
Re:Does everyone know it is Mac only? (Score:2)
And, again, I ask you
Good communication (Score:2)
The post wasn't for my information. I already knew this. I posted the comment for those who did not know it. If this article had been in a technical print publication, I'm sure the fact that the program was Mac only would have been mentioned in th
Re:Good communication (Score:2)
Although I don't discount that as impossible, I find it interesting that I clicked on the "Yesterday's News" link on the front page all the way back to Friday, January 7, and, despite seeing other Apple-related stories (i.e. the cell phone story), I did not see this as featured on the front page.
Furthermore, news stories that appear on the front page have their section before the title, i.e., "Apple: Steve Jobs Burps" or "
An option (Score:1)
CharlesP
Happy Bare Bones user ... (Score:2)
I wonder if this will actually be a tsrif tsop or not
Re:Happy Bare Bones user ... (Score:2)
Emacs (Score:1, Flamebait)
Syntax highlighting, multiple windows, extensions for all kinds of things and the ability to add your own extensions when you want/need to.
And it works in text mode. And it works the same under MS Windows or X Windows.
Download it here. [att.ne.jp]
Re:Emacs (Score:2)
Re:Emacs (Score:3, Insightful)
I know this is going to sound odd, but emacs feels out of place on a Mac. The X Windows version is completely ignorable, since even with good X11 support, X11 is not what the Mac is about. Now the Carbon/Aqua versions are a somewhat different beast, but emacs still brings in things like shortcuts that were developed in the PC world and don't make any sense in the Mac world.
On the flip side there's BBEdit/TextWragler, apps written by guys who have been doing Mac stuff for years(Apple users are unusually lo
Re:Emacs (Score:1)
I used to use TextWrangler (bought it more than a year ago), but it just doesn't have the Lisp-related features I need.
emacs legacy info... (Score:2)
Personally, I h
Re:Emacs (Score:3, Informative)
That does sound odd.
Put your cursor in almost any editable text field in your Mac -- the address bar in Safari, any text widgets in a Safari web page, the composition window in Apple Mail, etc -- and try a few Emacs keystrokes.
Huzzah! The Emacs keystrokes work! The beginning & end of a line are [ctrl]+[A] and [ctrl]+[E]; delete-right is [ctrl]+[D], delete-right is [ctrl]+[H]; etc.
Basically any application written in Coc
Re:Emacs (Score:2)
If you know Emacs, or learned Emacs keystrokes in another application that uses them (I learned them in Pine and the Bash shell, personally), then you can transfer that finger memory to huge chunks of OSX.
:-)
So... yeah. Emacs out of place on a Mac? Probably not...
That's like saying because Windows apps have buttons, and Cocoa apps also have buttons, that you can transfer that finger memory to huge chunks of OS X, and thus Windows apps won't seem out of place. Just because Apple decided to implement
Re:Emacs (Score:4, Interesting)
You answered your own question there, at least as far as most Mac users are concerned. The emacs user interface is completely foreign to a Mac environment.
Re:Emacs (Score:1, Redundant)
Oh?
Put your cursor in almost any editable text field in your Mac -- the address bar in Safari, any text widgets in a Safari web page, the composition window in Apple Mail, etc -- and try a few Emacs keystrokes.
Huzzah! The Emacs keystrokes work! The beginning & end of a line are [ctrl]+[A] and [ctrl]+[E]; delete-right is [ctrl]+[D], delete-right is [ctrl]+[H]; etc.
Basically any application written in Cocoa -- not the Finder,
Re:Emacs (Score:2)
Re:Emacs (Score:2)
(BTW, you can turn on full Emacs keybindings in BBEdit, right down to being able to save with ctrl-x ctrl-s, and quit with ctrl-x ctrl-c. Crazy, man.)
Re:Emacs (Score:2)
Those emacs keybindings existed in 1976, before any Unix programs had any keybindings, other than the use of stty(1) to set the "erase" and "kill" characters for those rare times that you might want to type "#" or "@".
Re:Emacs (Score:1)
however, it doesn't do for me, since i need internet or rendezvous document simultaneus editing. so a typical examples is i need to edit a document at work in ireland, one other needs to edit same document in france, 3 people in us and so on
Re:Emacs (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Emacs (Score:1)
"On Steroids"... (Score:2)
Re:"On Steroids"... (Score:2)
They had to do it (Score:4)
Since BBEdit is underfeatured and way overpriced for general text editing, Bore Bones had to do something to keep their name recognition alive...
Re:They had to do it (Score:1)
i use mainly subethaedit now. even for editing books.
i need to edit html and other stuff
Re:They had to do it (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:They had to do it (Score:4)
BBEdit REALLY doesn't suck. For basic text editing of course there are fine programs that are free, but for HTML and for other tasks that require a lot of text processing (supersmart search and replace, browsing multiple files, etc.) it is a godsend on the Mac. And it is ALL Mac; so intuitive it makes you want to drool with pleasure. There may be newer OSX text tools out there but I've had no need or desire to poke around at them, not with trusty old BBEdit around.
Big Mistake (Score:2)
Now all they've ensured is that people who have been using bbedit lite all these years get an upgrade to something almost as good as bbedit (like me... I was sometimes switching to SubEthaEdit but that slows down on big files), and low-end bbedit users will go with the free TextWrangler instead.
Re:Big Mistake (Score:2)
The only thing I miss in TW is Rendezvous integration - then it would knock out SEE (which isn't free anymore, I believe).
Re:They had to do it (Score:2)
Look a bit friendlier than gVim...
Re:They had to do it (Score:2)
Apple's X-Code editor is also nice, but I mostly use it for PHP, and I have to constantly remind it that it should open my Smarty
Tried it, will stick with emacs (Score:2)
When it does that, I'll probably use it. But not until.
Re:Tried it, will stick with emacs (Score:2)
I guess I had been spoiled by jEdit's ability to automatically indent the next line for you following an if/switch/while/etc. clause.
However, jEdit isn't quite as polished as BBEdit -- it has annoying little bugs here and there -- and BBEdit has superior Mac OS X integration. (For instance, you can launch BBEdit from the command line, unlike jEdit.) Plus, as a stude
Re:Tried it, will stick with emacs (Score:2)
Re:Tried it, will stick with emacs (Score:2)
Emacs-style line indenting is great when it works, but often it gets it wrong, to the point where I much prefer how BBEdit does it.
Re:Tried it, will stick with emacs (Score:1)
It's also got the even bigger plus of, you know, not being Emacs.
One word: (Score:2)
BBEdit (Score:2)
Re:BBEdit (Score:1)
It's a good editor. People should deal.
-tree
BBEdit Engineer Emeritus
Re:BBEdit (Score:2)
I'll move to TextWrangler for now because for my needs I can't justify the high upgrade costs. I do think it's a great editor though and it deserves its due respect.
Re:Uhh... (Score:3, Informative)
I can. I did. I don't think you even tried it.
When I open a
last i checked,
If you thin
Re:Uhh... (Score:3, Informative)
The old way:
So it looks like it has no file type, unless I look at it in the Finder or somesuch, where I see it has a BBEdit document icon, and a Get Info shows "Kind: HTM
Re:Uhh... (Score:3, Informative)
As you can clearly see, your assertion that this is a text file was incorrect, as SEE is telling the OS that it is not.
The simple answer, if you wish to continue using SEE as your default for that file type, is to set TextWrangler to open any file by default, ins
Re:Uhh... (Score:2)
Still not good enough (Score:2)
http://blog.blogbear.com/blog/single/842 [blogbear.com]
Re:Still not good enough (Score:2)
Um, no. If you consider the text that you're editing to be important, there's no reason for absolutely any file ever to not be in cvs. And in fact you don't need your editor to speak sftp (or, heaven forfend, ftp) if you're being sane, and committing to a repository rather than
Re:Still not good enough (Score:2)
If you don't want to replace that text with what you type next, why would you use the mechanism that has been incredibly consistent and standardized for literally decades for saying, "replace this text with what I type next"?
Because most IDEs do exactly what you say they shouldn't, and for good reason. Indenting blocks of text is so commonplace as to be pedantic; BBEdit's aparent lack of support for such a feature keep it from being a top-class editor. I have only briefly used it, but this was so immedia
Re:Still not good enough (Score:2)
How about that offtopic? (Score:2)
Following you into tangentland, the advent of politics.slashdot has caused me great dismay by revealing additional views of people whom I'd previously liked and respect; and yes, I'm looking at you, pudge. As passionate as I am about the macintosh, I can't
Re:How about that offtopic? (Score:2)
It was a joke, playing on his sig and his perpetual flames against conservatives.
the advent of politics.slashdot has caused me great dismay by revealing additional views of people whom I'd previously liked and respect; and yes, I'm looking at you, pudge
For your own sake -- it certainly has no impact on me -- I adjure you to not be so closed-minded that you can't even like or respect someone who
Re:Still not good enough (Score:1)
Cutting and copying are also commonplace (moreso than indenting text I'd wager), yet we don't highlight the text we wish to operate on and type a C or a P in order to perform those actions. We use a special key combination instead.
Why should we expect different behavior from the tab key? Because emacs screwed up X many years ago?
Re:Still not good enough (Score:2)
Why should we expect different behavior from the tab key? Because emacs screwed up X many years ago?
No, because it's convenient. Your mileage apparently varies, but I like editors that have this behavior, and in my experience it's not all that uncommon among IDEs or "programmers editors". It would be interestin to see/compile a list of different IDEs/editors and how their behavior compares in this respect.
Re:Still not good enough (Score:2)
You need to revisit jEdit [jedit.org]. It does everything you mentioned in your post.
Bluefish? (Score:2)
Re:Bluefish? (Score:1)
Favorite OS X text editor? (Score:1)
1: vim
2: jEdit
2: TextWrangler is moving up...
3: SubEthaEdit
4: Smultron
Needs better Services support (Score:2)
SubEthaEdit (Score:2)