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  2. Comparison of text editors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_text_editors

    To support specified character encoding, the editor must be able to load, save, view and edit text in the specific encoding and not destroy any characters. For UTF-8 and UTF-16, this requires internal 16-bit character support. Partial support is indicated if: 1) the editor can only convert the character encoding to internal (8-bit) format for ...

  3. ne (text editor) - Wikipedia

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

    It supports many features common in advanced text editors, such as syntax highlighting, regular expressions, configurable menus and keybindings and autocomplete. ne can pipe a marked block of text through any command line filter using the Through command bound to Meta+T by default. ne has some support for UTF-8 encoding and is 8-bit clean.

  4. Comparison of hex editors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_hex_editors

    Process memory editing Data inspector Bit editing Insert/delete bytes Character encodings Search Unicode File formats Disassembler File compare Find in files Bookmarks Macro Text editor; HxD: 8 EiB [5] Yes Windows 9x/NT and up Yes Yes Yes Yes ANSI, ASCII, OEM, EBCDIC, Macintosh Yes No Individual instructions only Yes No Yes No No 010 Editor: 8 ...

  5. MicroEMACS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MicroEMACS

    MicroEMACS is a small, portable Emacs-like text editor originally written by Dave Conroy in 1985, and further developed by Daniel M. Lawrence (1958–2010 [2] [3]) and was maintained by him. MicroEMACS has been ported to many operating systems , including CP/M , [ 4 ] MS-DOS , Microsoft Windows , VMS , Atari ST , AmigaOS , OS-9 , NeXTSTEP , and ...

  6. JED (text editor) - Wikipedia

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

    Edits TeX files with AUC-TeX style editing, BibTeX support; Asynchronous subprocess support, allowing one to compile from within the editor; Built-in support for the GPM mouse driver on Linux console; Abbreviation and dynamic abbreviation modes; 8-bit clean with mute/dead key support

  7. Comparison of file comparison tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_file...

    Eclipse (compare) Ediff: ExamDiff Pro: No Yes Yes Yes Yes Far Manager (compare) Yes No Yes No Yes fc: No Optional FileMerge (aka opendiff) No No No Optional Guiffy SureMerge: filesystem dependent Yes Yes IntelliJ IDEA (compare) jEdit JDiff plugin: Lazarus Diff Meld: Notepad++ (compare) No No No Yes Perforce P4Merge — No No No Yes Pretty Diff ...

  8. GNU Emacs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Emacs

    In its normal editing mode, GNU Emacs behaves like common text editors by allowing the user to type text with the keyboard and move the editing point with arrow keys. Escape key sequences or pressing the control key and/or the meta key , alt key or super keys in conjunction with a regular key produces modified keystrokes that invoke functions ...

  9. Sam (text editor) - Wikipedia

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

    Sam is a multi-file text editor based on structural regular expressions.It was originally designed in the early 1980s at Bell Labs by Rob Pike with the help of Ken Thompson and other Unix developers for the Blit windowing terminal running on v9 Unix; [1] it was later ported to other systems.