PARD: Editors
HexEd is a small binary editor. It features
- a user friendly, menu driven interface
- multiple windows (great for
manually comparing binaries!)
- national language support (currently
english and german are supported - more languages may be added without
recompiling)
View and edit files in hexadecimal or in ASCII. The file can be a device as
the file is not whole read. You can modify the file and search through it.
You have also copy&paste, and save to file functions. Modifications are
shown in bold.
angela! is a graph editor, easy to use and extensible by using modules.
angela! uses Tcl/Tk for interface and is so easy to port to other platforms.
It is intended to help the user creating simple graphs for courses,
technical diagrams or simply demonstrating what graph algorithms can do.
I was surprised in discovering how much time someone needed to draw
acceptable graphs with conventional vector based drawing programs.
tkHTML is a simple HTML editor based on the Tcl script language and the Tk
toolkit for X11. It allows quick composition and editting of HTML-format
documents, as well as a rapid way of converting existing text documents to
the HTML format.
gEdit is the small but powerful text editor of the GNOME project. It
includes features such as a plugin API, which allows gEdit to be extended to
support many features while keeping the size of the core binary small,
support for editing of multiple documents through an innovative use of
notebook tabs (while multiple window support is included) along with your
standard text-editor functions such as search and replace, a toolbar,
printing, and of course cut, copy and paste.
GXedit is a full featured graphical editor using the GTK widget set. It
features everything a modern text editor should have including toolbar,
multiple windows options, scripting, spell checking, inline agenda and more.
GXedit is a simple graphical texteditor with web
NEdit is a GUI style plain-text editor for X/Motif systems. It is very easy
to use, especially for those familiar with the Macintosh or MS Windows style
of interface. Don't let the lack of pizzazz of this web-site, or the
simplicity of NEdit's interface fool you. NEdit is now one of the most
popular editors in the Unix community, and one of the most powerful. It has
every significant feature required by professional programmers and other
intensive users of plain-text editing, carefully optimized and organized
around the principles and conventions of modern graphical user interfaces.
NEdit is also the most mouse-interactive of all Unix text editors. Try it
and see what you're missing.
A very small and simple ncurses-based text editor. Comes with a psychedelic
mode option, if you think other text editors are too boring. Supports
multi-byte characters on Linux console.
Vim is a nice texteditor which has console and X11 interfaces.
Yudit is a Unicode Text Editor / Text converter package for Linux.
Zed is a very simple, fast, powerful, small, low cpu consumer, highly
configurable text editor, for text terminal and Xwindow. It's written for
Unix (Tested with Linux, HPUX, SunOS, AIX).
Major features:
- Can use any keysequence (e.g. define a block with shift-arrow)
even under unix local text terminal (only with Linux).
- intelligent screen
update (not using the slow (n)curses).
- Column blocks with insert &
overwrite.
- multi window/multi buffer.
- color c++, html, tex, java,
mail file.
- shows parenthesis matching, searches for C functions,
reindents C blocks.
- about 200 commands and 100 variables to deal with.
- Can edit/insert control codes (ascii 0-31 and 128-159).
- executes
programs with output redirected on a window (i.e. make, man, etc...).
-
Can load files with CRLF and/or CR and/or LF end-of-line marker.
-
clipboard and delete buffer.
- savable run-time macros.
- simple and
powerful configuration system.
- easy document mode, almost ascii.
-
automatic wordwrap and reformat, even inside quoted line within a e-mail
file.
- hexdump-like mode to edit binary file.
- You can go everywhere
with the cursor
- Internal, fast file selector.
© 1999 by Stefan Hornburg
<racke@linuxia.de>
Last modified 29. May 1999