![]() ![]() Besides that Sublime is cross-platform and lightweight, you can run in seamlessly in not so powerful machines, Linux, Windows, etc. The selection of plugins is huge and you can extend Sublime text to adapt to your needs, frameworks of choice, syntax highlighting and so on. Sublime Text is a dream came true for fans of tweaking their tools, you can customize almost every single aspect of the editor and with an active theme developing community it's hard to get bored of the appearance of your editor. When I need to compare files, search in files or work on multiple files at the same time Sublime is my way to go, the Go to Definition or Anything feature is also super helpful when dealing with big projects. It's been five years of that day and I am still using it daily. I remember the first time I saw Sublime Text installed in the computer of a fellow developer, the black background blew my mind, the interface was sleek and super minimalistic. Finally it is cross-platform! Doesn't matter whether you are in windows, mac or linux, sublime text is free to download and use. So just download a theme if the look becomes boring! There is a thriving community out there designing cool new themes for sublime. Even codes can be run directly from the editor by connecting the compilers (like gcc or g++) from sublime. Actually this is the first thing I liked about sublime when I chose it after dumping notepad++ or other editors. For the lovers of dark mode or dark screen, this is the text-editor to use. ![]() The code highlight feature is very helpful. The color scheme for multiple programming environments make it a standard IDE for many platforms. Saved me a lot of time when the desktop accidentally hanged or my laptop was off due to battery drainage. The multi-tab feature (like any browser like google chrome) is very helpful for managing multiple text files. Even one can switch to the vim mode of text editing. It has the keyboard shortcuts inherited from the classic vim editor. I can speak about its endless features for a day but let's highlight the best ones. Sublime hands down is the best text editor I have ever used. If you started creating a file but did not save it before closing the editor, no problem, because opening it again will still be there, which is very useful when you want to have a draft-only file and notes, and if you want to keep it for a while with the project, but you don't want to save it, because then it no longer ![]() There is the option to install additional features via plugins, and there are several plugins ready with extra features for this editor Identify with markups which file you have edited but not yet saved, when working with GIT this is very useful View in two tabs or more within the same project, being able to see two files side by side Possibility to edit several lines of code simultaneously. Allows you to apply various types of search filters: searching all files, only files of a certain length, for a regular expression, and this is very useful as it saves you a lot of time when making bulk selections and edits in project files Set and save specific text layout and editing preferences in general, such as erasing spaces when saving, editor style and font size, etc : ctrl + p to search by filename ctrl + s to save ctrl + / to comment, in which case you still enter the comment according to the file type, where if. Ability to apply functions by shortcut. Leaves the colored text according to the file extension, which makes reading very attractive ![]() Lightweight interface, loads the project very quickly ![]()
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