Atom io vs coda 2
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Local files comparison & merging, (2 files) For SVN at least one plugin exists at the JetBrains IntelliJ IDEA plugin Repository. Remote/local file comparison by timestamp or content with the option to merge
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Upload external changes, coming from the terminal/console, SCSS/SASS compiler, etc. Automatic upload when saving or when leaving the window (when Alt+Tabing to the browser)
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Intelligent searching & replacing in files and directories, also with regular expresions Namespace proposition when typing or creating
Atom io vs coda 2 code#
Intelligent and configurable code completion in all languages mentioned: (checked at JetBrains IntelliJ IDEA plugin Repository) It's available for Linux, OSX and Windows. It has a lot of good and usefull features though it stays simple to handle and setup. So, if you need that cross-platform compatibility, look into it.įor me Jetbrains PHP-Storm is simply the best & most complete IDE! It's great, but I use vim with the same settings everywhere, and none of the other editors can do that. I go way back with BBEdit, and actually used to occasionally demo it at MacWorld. I bounce back and forth from Mac to Linux all day long and have at least one vim window open somewhere.Īnd, lest anyone think I'm not familiar with the Mac-only alternatives, I own all my copies of Coda, BBEdit and TextMate, and use them. vim on any of them will use the same commands, same plugins, same themes, etc., within the limitations of those environments.
Atom io vs coda 2 mac os#
Probably the most awesome thing about vim, is its available in an interfaced version on Mac OS as MacVim, on Linux using gvim, on Windows, and from the command-line of any of those OSes. Also, there are active users here and on SO's sister sites, plus on the vim IRC node on. Vim does have a steep learning curve, the vimtutor, which comes with the app, can help jump-start you. Upload to server functionality is handled by the netrw plugin. CVS, SVN, SVK, git, bzr, and hg within VIM, including committing changes and performing diffs. There's a great plugin called VCS, that handles my SVN stuff: Sourcing it later from the command-line is simple: vim -S path/to/sessionfile. From vim's "direct" mode, :mksession path/to/sessionfile will create it. Vim calls its projects "sessions", which stores all the files, window settings, macros, etc., for later reloading. I regularly do lookups of existing methods, variables, random text phrases via a CNTRL_N or CNTRL_P mapping which searches all the open files and pops up a list of the hits. I show it supports 176-ish different languages, including all the ones you mentioned. It's based on the venerable vim editor, from *nix, and can do everything you asked via plugins. An editor that gets overlooked a lot is MacVim.