Pulsar (former Atom) is still the best code editor in my opinion. It is easiest and fastest to use, has all the nice productivity boosting plugins and is overall great for all the same reasons the Atom was great. 🚀
See also [email protected]
Pulsar (former Atom) is still the best code editor in my opinion. It is easiest and fastest to use, has all the nice productivity boosting plugins and is overall great for all the same reasons the Atom was great. 🚀
See also [email protected]
About 6 months since I’ve switched away from vscode. To make Helix worth it you also need to use software that compliments it.
I work in DevOps, so I don’t do a ton of programming but everything I do is via terminal. I use Kitty Terminal, ZSH with oh-my-zsh for the shell, Zellij for an emulation layer (think tiling and tab manager in kitty), nnn for in terminal file manager, and helix for editor.
I almost never leave the terminal now, except when web browsing.
@LucidDaemon Aaah, that makes sense. I can see how Helix would be perfect for that use case.
Most of my work is webdev (JS/TS, Ruby, etc.), so it’s not quite the same. But I’d love to get back to Helix and use that more in my day-to-day. Would be nice to stay in the terminal more rather than bouncing back and forth between kitty and vscode.
I remember being really interested in Helix when it came out, but it didn’t have a built-in file picker.
Is this still an issue for users? Is there a built-in solution, or a usermade solution to this?
Also, is there plugin support?
I can’t use an editor without rainbow indent/brackets, without them code just takes too long to read that it becomes frustrating.
Space-f
lets you open a file in the current workspace, and:open /path
always let’s you open any file on the computerPlugin support not yet I think. Not gonna lie, I chose helix over nvim for it’s good out of the box experience, so I didn’t actually have a need for plugins yet.
Fair enough. That would be a use case for a plugin (or simply a setting!)
Is this a file tree, or just a fuzzy finder?
Fuzzy finders aren’t a substitute for a file tree picker. They’re only great, until you don’t know the name of a file, or until you need to know of a file’s existence in the first place.
File treenot a file tree like in a file explorer, more like the output offind
, but with filtering. The letters you type to restrict your search only need to present in that order in the file path, not as a string.So “abc” would match “./assets/others/abort/cancel.png”, not just “./assets/abc.png”
Additionally, lower case letters match case insensitive, upper case letters match case sensitive. This is surprisingly helpful if you don’t use exclusively lowercase file names.