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In computing, a full-screen writing program [1] or distraction-free editor [2] [3] [4] is a text editor that occupies the full display with the purpose of isolating the writer from the operating system (OS) and other applications. In this way, one should be able to focus on the writing alone, with no distractions from the OS and a cluttered ...
A review in Full Circle in August 2019 noted, "FeatherPad has obviously been designed for software developers, but it is also a good text editor for any general user to write plain text documents or web pages on." The review noted its relatively low RAM use compared to more full-featured text editors like jEdit and gedit. It also praised its ...
The SemWare Editor (TSE) is a text editor computer program for MS-DOS, OS/2, Windows and Linux. Starting in November 1985 as a shareware program called Qedit, it was later modified to run as a terminate-and-stay-resident (TSR) program, and ported to OS/2 [ 3 ] and eventually evolved (via rewrite) to TSE .
BBEdit Lite was a freeware stripped-down version of BBEdit, [15] [16] that ceased development in 2003. BBEdit Lite had many of the same features as BBEdit such as regular expressions, a plug-in architecture and the same text editing engine, but no programming and web-oriented tools such as syntax highlighting, command line shell, HTML tools or FTP support.
Partial support is indicated if: 1) the editor can only convert the character encoding to internal (8-bit) format for editing. 2) If some encodings are supported only in some platforms. 3) If the editor can only display specific character set (such as OEM) by loading corresponding font, but does not support keyboard entry for that character set.
Pico (Pine composer) is a text editor for Unix and Unix-like computer systems. It is integrated with Pine and Alpine, email clients initially designed by the Office of Computing and Communications at the University of Washington. [1] From the Pine FAQ: "Pine's message composition editor is also available as a separate stand-alone program ...
SciTE is highly configurable. Although there is no graphical preferences window, settings can be altered by editing plain text configuration files. [4] It is possible to have different settings for each language and project, as well as global or per user options. There are menu options in the standard install to open these files in the editor.