09-30-2008 01:00 PM Bluefish is a GUI-based text and code editor that runs on "most (maybe all?) POSIX compatible operating systems including Linux, FreeBSD, Ma cOS X, OpenBSD, and Solaris." It has an impressive feature list, and is both lightweight and speedy. It is not currently under heavy development primarily because it is a mature program that already does exactly what it is supposed to do with no fuss or complaint.
We have asked UNIX.com users over the years what is their favorite editor and why. Here is the top three answers.
Here is a new YT video on this question:
What Editor Does Everyone Use?
https://youtu.be/gqE8RTZZt9g
Of course, vi was the overwhelming favorite.
Credits:
1080 HD... (3 Replies)
resourceEditor(1) PythonCard Developers resourceEditor(1)NAME
resourceEditor - Resource editor used as part of the PythonCard GUI framework
SYNOPSIS
resourceEditor [file] [switches]
DESCRIPTION
The resourceEditor is the most common starting point for constructing a PythonCard application. Using this tool, you can create, position,
size, describe and connect not only your application's windows and all of the components they contain (buttons, fields, and other con-
trols), but also its menus and supporting dialogs. A direct-manipulation interface enables you to create, drag, and size window components
in the grand tradition of Integrated Development Environments (IDEs). The resourceEditor also incorporates a menu editor and a background
editor for managing the non-component portions of your PythonCard application.
Scripting is not integrated into the resourceEditor. Instead, you should use your favorite Python script editor to write the code that
gives your application its intelligence and behavior (for instance, you could use codeEditor(1), also part of the PythonCard GUI frame-
work).
SWITCHES
Note that switches must come after any filename in order to be recognized.
-p Show property editor
-m Show message watcher
-l Enable logging
-s Show shell
-m Show namespace
-d Show debug menu
NOTES
The resourceEditor utility also provides additional functionality that is not discussed in this manpage, because it is somewhat difficult
to completely describe usage of a GUI program in a text-based manpage. For more detailed usage instructions or for more information on the
PythonCard GUI framework in general, you should install the pythoncard-doc package and take a look at the various walk-throughs, tutorials
and samples included with it.
Once the pythoncard-doc package is installed, the documentation is installed to /usr/share/doc/pythoncard-doc, and is also available via
Debian's doc-base infrastructure - find it in the Devel section using dwww(1), doc-central(1) or dhelp(1).
If you would rather not install the pythoncard-doc package, you can find essentially the same information on the PythonCard website:
http://pythoncard.sourceforge.net
BUGS
Although it is considered to be stable, this is still development-level software.
Please report bugs in this or any PythonCard component to the Debian Bug Tracking system using reportbug(1).
AUTHOR
This manpage was written by Kenneth J. Pronovici <pronovic@debian.org>, for use by the Debian project. Content was based on previously-
existing PythonCard documentation in other forms.
SEE ALSO codeEditor(1), findfiles(1),
PythonCard GUI Framework August 2003 resourceEditor(1)