Pular para o conteúdo principal

RJ TextEd: Free Text Editor with Syntax Highlighting and Code Folding

RJ TextEd: Free Text Editor with Syntax Highlighting and Code Folding: "
rj texted.png

arrow Windows Windows only arrow

I’m always on the look out for awesome text and code editors, but the percentage that turn out to be good versus the number I actually test is fairly low. RJ TextEd ranks pretty high in that list though. It’s free, portable, and has a very extensive list of features. In fact it has so many features that at first glance it may seem overwhelming.




What are my favorite features? That would definitely be the FTP/SFTP integration and the code folding. Being able to upload files to a remote FTP location without needing a second app is awesome, and a feature that most text editors don’t include. The code folding lets you expand and collapse blocks of code, which I find to be amazingly handy when working with a page filled with thousands of lines of code. Keep in mind that these are just two of the dozens of nice features included with RJ TextEd.

Here’s a rundown of some others worth highlighting:

  • Auto completion.
  • Column mode.
  • Multi edit and multi select Advanced sorting.
  • Handles both ASCII and binary files.
  • Html wizards.
  • FTP and SFTP client with synchronization.
  • File explorer, text clips, code explorer, project manager…
  • Convert between code pages, Unicode formats and text formats.
  • Unicode and ANSI code page detection.
  • Open/Save UTF-8 encoded files without a signature (BOM).
  • Unicode file paths and file names. Html validation, format and repair.
  • Tools available like syntax editor, color picker, charmap…
  • Spell checking.
  • Advanced regular expression searching.

Since RJ TextEd is both free and portable you don’t have much to lose by trying it out. If you do give it a whirl let us know what you think about it in the comments.

RJ TextEd Homepage (Windows only; Freeware)

"

Comentários

Postagens mais visitadas deste blog

Favigen, Favicon Generator

Favigen, Favicon Generator : " Favicons are small icons that help identify websites. They are used as a visual representation of a website both in the web browser and at many online services. The three most prominent locations of favicons are the browser’s address bar, the tabbar and the bookmarks folder. Many webmasters like to create custom favicons to add that custom identifier to their website. Favicons can be created in many image and icon editors, but also online. Favigen is a straightforward favicon generator that can turn an image into a favicon. All that it takes is to pick an image from the local hard drive first, select the dimensions of the favicon and click the submit button to make the service generate the favicon. Favigen supports several image formats, including jpg and png, and it does not seem to have size restrictions either. Available image dimensions range are 16×16, 32×32 and 64×64. The generated favicon is displayed directly on the page. A click on do...

A simple rsync script to back up your home directory

A simple rsync script to back up your home directory : " Backing up important data is obviously something we should all do. Unfortunately, it is not always easy to make it happen. We get lazy; we do not have the additional hardware for a backup server; it takes a long time and a lot of CDs to back up to optical media; we do not trust online backup services; backup schemes are difficult to set up and use — any of dozens of reasons can stand in our way. Still, we know we should be backing up our important data. Modern open source Unix-like operating systems offer a plethora of options for incredibly simple, effective backup schemes, however. If the problem is figuring out how to set one up, a simple rsync solution may be exactly what you need. The rsync utility is used to synchronize files between two systems. It does so by way of incremental copies, only copying from the source to the destination what has not already been copied there, saving time, network bandwidth, and syst...

Google Wave now open to the public: faster, Robots and Gadgets aplenty!

Google Wave now open to the public: faster, Robots and Gadgets aplenty! : " Filed under: Internet , Google If you somehow missed it, Google Wave is now a bonafide Labs project: rather than being an invite-only alpha, it's now a public beta test! If you don't already have an account, just head on over to Wave and use your regular Google login details. If you've not seen any of the Google Wave introductory videos , you should check them out -- they explain the whole thing a lot more succinctly than I ever could. Wave has also been enabled for Google Apps domains -- businesses could convert their internal communication to Waves today! Leading up to this public release there have a lot of changes. It's by no means finished, but Google Wave is now a lot faster . It's also more intuitive -- more useful -- and given the large number of Robots and Gadgets now reaching prime-time readiness, it feels like the mass adoption of Wave is imminent. Also, if you're an ol...