I regret nothing. Say what you want.

Edit: I just saw the two typos. If you find them, you’re welcome to keep them.

  • @[email protected]
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    781 month ago

    I genuinely do a lot of coding in Kate, the standard KDE editor. It’s enough to do a lot of things, has highlighting, and is more than enough when you just need a quick fix.

    I am also still using nano when editing stuff in the terminal. Please, don’t judge me.

    • @[email protected]
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      121 month ago

      Yep, I came here to say that Kate is really nice. Even though I’m an emacs user and won’t use it.

      Nano, on the other hand, can’t do almost anything, so I can’t recommend that people make heavy use of it. It’s ok for random small edits, but that’s it. (By the way, YSK that you can set your terminal to use Kate as the default editor by setting the $EDITOR variable.)

    • Ghoelian
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      451 month ago

      To be fair, Kate isn’t just a text editor, it actually is an IDE. The text editor version would be kwrite, which would be horrible to program in.

          • Ghoelian
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            61 month ago

            Oh wow you’re right, it’s basically just kate without some of the toolbars now. Hadn’t used plain kwrite in a while.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 month ago

              It also doesn’t have Sessions.
              Making it a better choice when you want to quickly open/create a file (the Session selection menu requires a lot of tabbing or using the mouse)

    • @[email protected]
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      91 month ago

      KWrite is the standard text editor. Kate is the advanced one. The name actually literally stands for “KDE Advanced Text Editor”

      • Ephera
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        21 month ago

        I’m not aware of distros preinstalling KWrite, though…?

        • @[email protected]
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          29 days ago

          Huh, I did not know that any didn’t. I just tried a bunch, and here is a quick breakdown of what was preinstalled on each:

          Distro Kate KWrite
          Bazzite true true
          Debian true true
          Fedora false true
          KDE Neon true false
          Kubuntu true false
          Manjaro true true
          openSUSE true false
          SteamOS true true
          • Ephera
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            41 month ago

            Well, I can throw in another for free:

            distro Kate kwrite
            openSUSE true false

            But yeah, interesting list. These days, KWrite is basically just Kate with different configuration, if I understand correctly, so it always feels like you might as well go with Kate. In my opinion, KWrite is also not particularly easier to use, since basic editing works the same, but I guess, that can be disagreed on.

            I do like that Kate is pre-installed. Imagine Windows, but rather than notepad.exe, you get Notepad++ out of the box. Now imagine that to also be a whole lot better and then that’s what it feels like to have Kate on fresh installations.
            You can just start coding something right away, without it being necessary to install a different editor.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 month ago

      Geany is a nice GUI option. It’s a bit more capable but still lean.

      It’s probably time for me to re-evaluate the host of coding editors out there. For the most part I just use good text editors. Though I do love Spyder, I only use it for a certain subset of tasks.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      Me too. I’m still not sure what the problem is and I’m kind of afraid to ask.

      I do have the plugin for multi-line editing set up, I guess.

      • Diplomjodler
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        31 month ago

        All the cool kids use vim, so using nano makes you uncool, I guess. But I use Mint, so I’m uncool anyway.