City Pedia Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Kate (text editor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kate_(text_editor)

    The KDE Advanced Text Editor, or Kate, is a source code editor developed by the KDE free software community. It has been a part of KDE Software Compilation since version 2.2 , which was first released in 2001.

  3. Comparison of online source code playgrounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_online...

    Playground Access PHP Ruby/Rails Python/Django SQL Other dbfiddle [am]: Free No No No Yes Db2, Firebird, MariaDB, MySQL, Node.js, Oracle, Postgres, SQL Server, SQLite, YugabyteDB

  4. Code folding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_folding

    A folding editor appeared in the occam IDE circa 1983, which was called the Inmos Transputer Development System (TDS) [7],. [8] The "f" editor (in list below) probably is the most intact legacy from this work. The Macintosh computer historically had a number of source code editors that "folded" portions of code via "disclosure triangles".

  5. Editor war - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Editor_war

    The rivalry has become an enduring part of hacker culture and the free software community. The Emacs versus vi debate was one of the original "holy wars" conducted on Usenet groups, [1] with many flame wars fought between those insisting that their editor of choice is the paragon of editing perfection, and insulting the other, since at least ...

  6. vi (text editor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vi_(text_editor)

    vi (pronounced as distinct letters, / ˌ v iː ˈ aɪ / ⓘ) [1] is a screen-oriented text editor originally created for the Unix operating system. The portable subset of the behavior of vi and programs based on it, and the ex editor language supported within these programs, is described by (and thus standardized by) the Single Unix Specification and POSIX.

  7. CKEditor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CKEditor

    CKEditor 4 has features found in desktop word processors such as styles formatting (bold, italic, underline, bulleted and numbered lists), tables, block quoting, web resource linking, safe undo function, image inserting, paste from Word and other common HTML formatting tools.