I finally converted over to PhpStorm as I was working with Magento and Magento as you know is mainly #PHP based. I find Sublime Text lacks some functionality, after all it is just a text editor rather than a full fledged IDE. I kept using Sublime Text for about 4-5 years. I found the speed amazing compared to some other tools at the time. I started coding in Sublime Text because all of the tutorials I was doing back then everyone was using it. But then, I’ve been using it for two decades and millions of words.I've been in the #frontend game for about 7 years now. If you’ve never bought BBEdit, it’s $50-cheap! I remember when BBEdit cost more than a hundred bucks. ![]() Existing users can upgrade from BBEdit 11 for $30, or from an earlier version for $40. It took some time, but I’m gradually getting used to having my pairs of characters auto-complete, and I can also select some text and type one character to have the entire selection surrounded by the paired characters.īasically, it’s the BBEdit upgrade I’d expect-one that adds a raft of new features, bug fixes, and under-the-hood changes to lay the groundwork for future features and compatibility with future versions of macOS. With this version I’ve also embraced the concept of auto-insertion of delimiters, such as parentheses and brackets, that are used in both programming and text-markup languages. BBEdit 12 includes a feature like that, too-it’s a tool called Canonize that batch searches-and-replaces text strings. Embedded in that script, as well, were a bunch of text replacements based on our house style-replacing “web site” with “website”, for example. (Though I’d love it if BBEdit would add support for even more functions on columnar data, like sorting and maybe even styling.)īack at IDG, I built an AppleScript script that I’d pass around inside a BBEdit package that would take a Markdown file and format in some very particular ways for the quirks of our content-management system and site design. You might think that sounds like an esoteric feature, but I’ve probably pasted a tab-delimited text block from BBEdit into Microsoft Excel purely for column management hundreds of times at this point. I do a lot of text and data formatting in BBEdit, and one of the great additions in this version is a Columns editing command, that enables quick processing of comma- and tab-delimited text ranges-you can cut, copy, delete, and rearrange columns. ![]() (I’ve been using a slightly modified set of text colors in BBEdit for ages now.) These kids today, with their dark themes! Fortunately, old complainers like me can switch back to the light theme or build a custom theme of their own. ![]() In keeping with the style of the times, BBEdit now uses a dark theme-light text on a dark background-by default. “Almost every line of code has been touched,” according to BBEdit author Rich Siegel. ![]() Today marks the arrival of version 12, with a bunch of new features and changes-Bare Bones Software says more than a hundred of them. Have I written more than a million words in Bare Bones Software’s BBEdit? I probably passed that mark a while ago, but who’s counting? It’s been my primary writing tool for the last 20-plus years, and it’s still going strong. No longer do I need to go to Excel just to format tab-delimited text.
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