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macvim

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  Analyzed about 20 hours ago

MacVim is a port of the text editor Vim to Mac OS X. MacVim supports multiple windows with tabbed editing and a host of other features such as: bindings to standard OS X keyboard shortcuts (⌘Z, ⌘V, ⌘A, ⌘G, etc.), transparent backgrounds, full-screen mode, multibyte editing with OS X input ... [More] methods and automatic font substitution, ODB editor support, and more. Most importantly, MacVim brings you the full power of Vim 7.2 to Mac OS X. Note: MacVim is in no way connected with http://macvim.org. That site is no longer being maintained and only provides outdated binaries of the old Carbon port of Vim. Snow LeopardMacVim now builds as 64 bit by default on Snow Leopard (10.6). I simplified the build process as well, so check out the Building wiki page on how to build your own binary. The stable build seems to run fine on Snow Leopard, but please consider using a snapshot instead as they are built specifically for Snow Leopard (the snapshot also runs on Leopard). DownloadThere are two official binaries of MacVim to choose from: Stable: The latest stable release is MacVim 7.2 stable 1.2 which was released on the 21st of August 2008. It is a universal binary which runs on Mac OS X 10.4 and 10.5. Mac OS X 10.6 ("Snow Leopard") seems to work fine as well but I strongly suggest using the latest snapshot build on Snow Leopard. Snapshot: A new snapshot is released every month or so and contains several features and bug-fixes which have not yet been included in the stable build. The latest version can be downloaded here. If the download fails for some reason then try using the download mirror. You may also build your own version from the source code. Please consider contributing to the MacVim project if you are able. MacVim is distributed free as charityware (type :h license inside MacVim for details). If you find MacVim a useful addition to your life please consider helping needy children in Uganda. Getting startedThe book A Byte of Vim is freely available online and is suitable for newcomers as well as more experienced users of Vim. Another freely available online book is Vim Recipies which serves as a cookbook where you can look up different ways to perform a specific task. There are also several Vim tutorials available online, such as this Vim introduction and tutorial. Once familiar with the basics you may benefit from using the following article on Efficient Editing With Vim as a quick reference. Before diving into all that material, you may want to read the article "Why use Vim?" which dispels common misconceptions about Vim and also provides examples which illustrate some of its many features. Vim comes bundled with a tutor which can be quite helpful to go through since it encourages you to experiment as you read. At the moment it requires some trickery to get going, but once there it should be easy to follow. The tutor is a text file which needs to be copied to a folder where it can be modified. To copy the tutor to your home folder, open MacVim and type (make sure you are in normal mode first by hitting Esc): :!cp $VIMRUNTIME/tutor/tutor ~/then hit enter. This will place a file named tutor in your home folder. Now, to start the tutor simply open that file in MacVim, e.g. by pressing ⌘O to show the file open dialog and then browsing to the tutor file. How to get helpThere is a fairly active mailing list called vim_mac where you can post questions about MacVim and request new features. Before posting a question, you should consult the FAQ, search the vim_mac archives, and consult the built-in Vim help by typing :h macvim inside MacVim. Since the binary releases always are a couple of versions behind the source code it is also possible that any problems you encounter may already have been fixed. Check the change log for the latest updates to the source code. Help me!If you find a bug, then please file an Issue report but first make sure that it has not already been reported by searching for old Issues. Unless you are absolutely sure that you have really found a bug you should probably post a question on the vim_mac mailing list first. (Note that there are several people answering questions on the mailing list whereas there is only one of me responding to Issue reports.) [Less]

536K lines of code

0 current contributors

over 9 years since last commit

39 users on Open Hub

Inactive
4.72727
   
I Use This

JabRef

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  Analyzed about 10 hours ago

JabRef is a graphical Java application for managing bibtex (. bib) databases. It uses the bitex format as native file format, which makes it ideal for collaborating. JabRef can import bibliographies in numerous formats, provides extensive searching, sorting, and grouping features, can automatically ... [More] create bibtex keys, and can insert citations into TeXstudio, OpenOffice, WinEdit, LyX, and more. With Bibtex4word, an intengration with Microsoft Word is also possible. [Less]

198K lines of code

72 current contributors

1 day since last commit

39 users on Open Hub

Very High Activity
4.7619
   
I Use This

Smultron

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  Analyzed about 17 hours ago

Smultron is a free text editor for Mac OS X, which is both easy to use and powerful. It is designed to not confuse newcomers nor disappoint advanced users. It has all the advantages of an Cocoa application and some of its features are tabs, line numbers, support for syntax colouring for many ... [More] different languages, functions list, support for text encodings, snippets, a toolbar, a status bar, preview, split window, multi-document find and replace with regular expressions, possibility to show invisible characters, authenticated open and saves, command-line utility, full screen editing and running commands and scripts from within the application. [Less]

124K lines of code

0 current contributors

over 13 years since last commit

39 users on Open Hub

Inactive
3.94118
   
I Use This

Far Manager

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  Analyzed 1 day ago

Far Manager is a program for managing files and archives in Windows operating systems. Far Manager works in text mode and provides a simple and intuitive interface for performing most of the necessary actions: viewing files and directories, editing, copying and renaming files and many other ... [More] operations. Far Manager has a multi-language, easily configurable interface. File system navigation is made easier through the use of color highlighting and file sort groups. The functionality of Far Manager is greatly extended by external DLL modules — plugins (made possible by a special set of interfaces — the Plugins API). For example, archive support, the FTP client, the temporary panel and the network browser are all implemented as plugins included in the standard distribution of Far. [Less]

772K lines of code

16 current contributors

2 days since last commit

38 users on Open Hub

High Activity
5.0
 
I Use This

Kdenlive

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Claimed by KDE Analyzed about 18 hours ago

Kdenlive is an intuitive and powerful multi-track video editor, including most recent video technologies, released as a free software (GPL). Using Kdenlive is investing in a community driven project, which aims to establish relationships between people in order to built the best video tools. ... [More] Kdenlive relies on several other open source projects, such as FFmpeg and the MLT video framework. It was designed to answer needs ranging from basic video editing to professional work. Kdenlive supports, amongst others, colour and audio scopes, proxy clips, rotoscoping, capture from Blackmagic cards. [Less]

251K lines of code

31 current contributors

1 day since last commit

36 users on Open Hub

Very High Activity
4.0
   
I Use This

grafx2

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  No analysis available

GrafX2 is a bitmap paint program that allows you to draw in more than 60 video resolutions including most of the standard Amiga resolutions : 320x200, 320x256, 320x512, 640x256, 640x512, etc. It was written to run under DOS, but the code you'll find here was modified to use SDL and modern operating ... [More] systems. This program is dedicated to everybody who knows what a single pixel is. Its layout is not very different from the famous Deluxe Paint or Brilliance, so it will be quite easy to handle it if you know at least one of these programs. If you aren't used to the art of drawing with up to 256 colors, it will be a little more difficult for you, but you should give it a try (or more, because most of the power of this program won't show up on the first try). [Less]

0 lines of code

27 current contributors

0 since last commit

36 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
4.85714
   
I Use This
Mostly written in language not available
Licenses: gpl

Padre

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  Analyzed about 16 hours ago

Perl Application Development and Refactoring Environment A Perl IDE written in Perl

123K lines of code

0 current contributors

9 months since last commit

36 users on Open Hub

Very Low Activity
4.46667
   
I Use This

Krita

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Claimed by KDE Analyzed 1 day ago

Digital Painting, Creative Freedom! Krita is a KDE program for sketching and painting, offering an end–to–end solution for creating digital painting files from scratch by masters. Fields of painting that Krita explicitly supports are concept art, creation of comics and textures for rendering. ... [More] Modeled on existing real-world painting materials and workflows, Krita supports creative working by getting out of the way and with a snappy response. [Less]

917K lines of code

52 current contributors

3 days since last commit

36 users on Open Hub

Very High Activity
4.14286
   
I Use This

MyPaint

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  Analyzed about 1 hour ago

A fast and easy open-source graphics application for digital painters. It lets you focus on the art instead of the program. You work on your canvas with minimum distractions, bringing up the interface only when you need it.

58.7K lines of code

38 current contributors

about 2 months since last commit

35 users on Open Hub

Low Activity
4.82353
   
I Use This

Kino

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  Analyzed 4 months ago

Kino is a non-linear DV (digital video) editor for GNU/Linux. It features integration with IEEE-1394 for capture, VTR control, and recording back to the camera. It captures video to disk in RawDV and AVI format, in both type-1 DV and type-2 DV (separate audio stream) encodings. You can load multiple ... [More] video clips, cut and paste portions of video/audio, and save to an edit decision list (SMIL XML format). Most edit and navigation commands are mapped to equivalent vi key commands. Also, Kino can load movies and export the composite movie in a number of formats: DV over IEEE 1394, Raw DV, DV AVI, still frames, WAV, MP3, Ogg Vorbis, MPEG-1, MPEG-2, and DivX. Still frame export uses Imlib1, which has built-in support for PPM, JPEG, PNG, TIFF, GIF, and whatever your ImageMagick installation suppor [Less]

97.4K lines of code

0 current contributors

over 8 years since last commit

34 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
3.55556
   
I Use This