[CentOS] Re: Latest version of kate editor
Yamaban
foerster at lisas.de
Tue Feb 2 18:19:14 UTC 2016
On Tue, 2 Feb 2016 18:02, H wrote:
> On 02/02/2016 03:50 PM, Lamar Owen wrote:
>> On 02/02/2016 09:28 AM, Jonathan Billings wrote:
>> > CentOS is not a bleeding-edge distribution that constantly keeps
>> > packages up to date with the upstream projects. If you want that, try
>> > another distribution like Fedora.
>> <rant>
>> GNOME can get a rebase to a newer version, but KDE can't..... this from a
>> former KDE user who would love to go back to KDE but refuses to deal with
>> the issues older versions have.
>>
>> This is, of course, an upstream issue and not a CentOS one, and I know
>> that.... so I now use GNOME, even though it would be nice to see parity in
>> the allowing of a rebase of KDE like the one for GNOME.
>> </rant>
>>
>>
>> > There is a 3rd-party repository that might have an upgraded KDE:
>> > http: //www.trinitydesktop.org/about.php
>> >
>>
>> Trinity Desktop (TDE), is a fork of KDE 3.x, and not updated from that. So
>> in ways it is older, yet newer.
>>
> What do people use as a programming editor on CentOS 6? My first impression of
> kate was favorable, not only did it support the usual programming and
> scripting languages but also markdown which I have recently discovered...
Well, KDE has its own trouble, even upstream, and for RedHat / Fedora
packagers KDE seems a clear second or third choice to work on.
The Gnome upgrade from Centos 7.1 to 7.2 was "urgs" and has driven me to
switch to XFCE even @work, where I had to ask the sys-admins for
allowance beforehand.
vim / gvim / jedit
Vim and its graphical frontend gvim are in use for nearly all my tasks as
text-editors. A special place in my heart has (g)vimdiff which is a great
help im my daily work (shell-scripts, php, css, html, js, and markdown
make most the volume)
The availability of a very powerfull text editor that can be worked with
in a terminal the same whether local or remote (via ssh) gives a
concistency that other editors lack, or, in the case of emacs, are not my
taste at all.
Jedit is java based, and for me in use where projects span bejond a single
Operating System (Linux, Solaris, Windows and MacOS mostly).
- Yamaban
More information about the CentOS
mailing list