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The open source Atom text/code editor from GitHub is seeking to ease the code review process, hoping to relieve some developer anxiety resulting from pull request reviews.
After months of testing and loads of hands-on feedback from tens of thousands of users, GitHub’s programmable text editor Atom is now available for the general public to download. Its pricetag ...
Source code repository company GitHub today released version 1.0 of its Atom text editor for working with code. Contributors to the Atom open-source project have made several improvements to the ...
Launched in 2011, Atom is a free and open-source text and source code editor for software developers working on a range of operating systems.
At Facebook, developers have already used Atom to build their own Atom, a text editor called Nuclide that's tailored for use with the unusually enormous amount of code that runs the Facebook empire.
Online code repository GitHub is taking on the venerable Emacs and Vim text editors by releasing a text editor of its own, called Atom, which it claims is more suited to the Web era of development.
Sublime Text, Visual Studio Code, Brackets, and Atom rise to the top, but several others are also worth considering.
Both the Visual Studio Code and Atom open source code editors, which share Electron-based technology roots, have come out with updates this week.
Microsoft-owned GitHub announced it will sunset its popular Atom 'hackable text editor' late this year as it concentrates on cloud-based dev tooling.
GitHub has an Electron-based editor called Atom, and Visual Studio Code is based on it. With Atom being cross-platform, it's no great surprise that Visual Studio Code is, too.