188
I Use This!
Low Activity

Ratings and Reviews

Analyzed 1 day ago. based on code collected 5 days ago.
Community Rating
4.33824
   

Average Rating:   4.3/5.0
Number of Ratings:   68
Number of Reviews:   1

My Review of jEdit

You have not rated or reviewed this project.
Click below to rate/review.
My Rating:
0
 
 New Review

Most Helpful Reviews

Randy J.... says:
Powerful, well-performing low-cl...  
4.0
   
written almost 16 years ago

I regularly use 4 or 5 editors, depending on the type of system, type of file being edited, etc. I'm a long-time (X)Emacs user, and keep vi skills fresh. I also use Eclipse and (when given no other options) Notepad and/or TextEdit for PC or Mac.

I started using jEdit a few years ago, and find that it works really, really well. It's very responsive, comes up fairly quickly (for a Java GUI app, when compared to an IDE like Eclipse or kitchen-sink like emacs), and has a lot of features. It also has a rich plug-in architecture and a good user-base. You can add plug-ins as you need them, keeping the editor as lightweight (or not) as you need it to be.

Mostly, I use it for XML documents and other files that are structured but are not program code (most programming-related editing is done with Eclipse or emacs). But it has excellent support for a wide range of languages... I just have years of customizations invested in the other editors. Still, it stays in my launcher-menu, whether I'm on Linux, Windows or Mac OSX. One of the few tools I use that that behaves *absolutely* identically on all three platforms.

Did this review help you? |

Most Recent Reviews

Randy J.... says:
Powerful, well-performing low-cl...  
4.0
   
written almost 16 years ago

I regularly use 4 or 5 editors, depending on the type of system, type of file being edited, etc. I'm a long-time (X)Emacs user, and keep vi skills fresh. I also use Eclipse and (when given no other options) Notepad and/or TextEdit for PC or Mac.

I started using jEdit a few years ago, and find that it works really, really well. It's very responsive, comes up fairly quickly (for a Java GUI app, when compared to an IDE like Eclipse or kitchen-sink like emacs), and has a lot of features. It also has a rich plug-in architecture and a good user-base. You can add plug-ins as you need them, keeping the editor as lightweight (or not) as you need it to be.

Mostly, I use it for XML documents and other files that are structured but are not program code (most programming-related editing is done with Eclipse or emacs). But it has excellent support for a wide range of languages... I just have years of customizations invested in the other editors. Still, it stays in my launcher-menu, whether I'm on Linux, Windows or Mac OSX. One of the few tools I use that that behaves *absolutely* identically on all three platforms.

Did this review help you? |