Difference between revisions of "Editor: gedit"
From Dreamwidth Notes
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*gedit also has colour-coded highlighting for all sorts of things including perl. It can be activated either by going to View / Highlight Mode / Scripts while editing a file, or by saving your file with an extension such as .plx which gedit recognises as being a perl script. | *gedit also has colour-coded highlighting for all sorts of things including perl. It can be activated either by going to View / Highlight Mode / Scripts while editing a file, or by saving your file with an extension such as .plx which gedit recognises as being a perl script. | ||
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+ | *An advanced editing plugin for Gedit allows to remove or reduce whitespace in the code: [http://live.gnome.org/Gedit/AdvancedEditingPlugin] | ||
[[Category: Editors]] | [[Category: Editors]] |
Revision as of 23:34, 11 April 2009
Expand: This needs expansion.
gedit is a GUI (not command-line) editor available with Gnome on Linux.
By default, gedit uses Unix line endings, so this should not need changing.
Tabs can be changed into spaces in Edit / Preferences / Editor by selecting the "insert spaces instead of tabs" tickbox.
Also useful
- Edit / Preferences / View has a "Display line numbers" tickbox which can be very helpful when error-hunting
- gedit also has colour-coded highlighting for all sorts of things including perl. It can be activated either by going to View / Highlight Mode / Scripts while editing a file, or by saving your file with an extension such as .plx which gedit recognises as being a perl script.
- An advanced editing plugin for Gedit allows to remove or reduce whitespace in the code: [1]