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A collaborative real-time editor is a type of collaborative software or web application which enables real-time collaborative editing, simultaneous editing, or live editing of the same digital document, computer file or cloud-stored data – such as an online spreadsheet, word processing document, database or presentation – at the same time by different users on different computers or mobile ...
A multi-platform Markdown text editor with writing focused feature set Proprietary: jEdit: A free cross-platform programmer's editor written in Java, GPL licensed. GPL-2.0-or-later: JOVE: Jonathan's Own Version of Emacs JOVE JuffEd: A lightweight text editor written in Qt4. GPL-2.0-only: Kate: A basic text editor for the KDE desktop. LGPL, GPL ...
OnlyOffice (formerly TeamLab), stylized as ONLYOFFICE, is a free software office suite and ecosystem of collaborative applications. It consists of online editors for text documents, spreadsheets, presentations, forms and PDFs, and the room-based collaborative platform.
Coda is a document editor that uses features from spreadsheets, presentation documents, word processor files, and apps. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] [ 6 ] Possible uses for Coda documents include using them as a wiki, database, or project management tool. [ 5 ]
A screencast demonstration of simultaneous editing using the multiple selection feature of Sublime Text v3. In human–computer interaction, simultaneous editing is an end-user development technique allowing a single user to make multiple simultaneous edits of text in a multiple selection at once through direct manipulation.
Etherpad (previously known as EtherPad) [2] [3] is an open-source, web-based collaborative real-time editor, allowing authors to simultaneously edit a text document, and see all of the participants' edits in real-time, with the ability to display each author's text in their own color.
Google Docs allows users to create and edit documents online while collaborating with users in real-time. Edits are tracked by the user making the edit, with a revision history presenting changes. [4] An editor's position is highlighted with an editor-specific color and cursor, and a permissions system regulates what users can do.
Emacs (/ ˈ iː m æ k s / ⓘ), originally named EMACS (an acronym for "Editor Macros"), [1] [2] [3] is a family of text editors that are characterized by their extensibility. [4] The manual for the most widely used variant, [5] GNU Emacs, describes it as "the extensible, customizable, self-documenting, real-time display editor". [6]