What is the best text editor for Windows?

What is the best text editor for Windows?
Is it VS Code?

Attached: vs code.png (1223x630, 183K)

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>Atom
>NotePad++
all you need

Isn't love all you need?

youtube.com/watch?v=dsxtImDVMig

b-but my hackermang themes

Atom has hackerman themes

Best text editor would be Notepad ++

If you meant to say coding environment that might be true but for a text editor VS code is too slow and feature heavy.

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VS Code is obviously great for JavaScript and TypeScript, and you can install some extensions and get away with most scripting language, but I wouldn't use it for things like Java or C#.
There's no such a thing as best text editor for everything.

if you have the memory to spare sure load it up once and leave it there

Which one for Python

Atom

>A hackable text editor for the 21st Century

the fuck does that mean

VS Code is actually pretty ok. PyCharm is better though, and there's also Jupyter if you like visualizing your code in real time.

yes.

It's very customizable with many themes and add-ons.

Sublime

Atom is cool but vs code is faster and does everything atom does. Atom has crashed on me a handful of times during work. Never lost anything but annoying. I would switch to VScode but that means finding a theme that matches atom syntax coloring and installing extensions and learning new hotkeys.

With that said many professionals still use atom instead of VScode but if I was just starting out I would roll with VScode.

>ST for quick shit
>VSCode for real shit (bonus WSL C++ integration)
btw I use arch

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>learning new hotkeys
Ctrl+Shift+P

VS code is such a laggy piece of shit.

Emacs with evil mode and language-specific extensions for programming.

Org mode covers any misc note taking needs.

Sounds [somewhat] like the Beatles.

>that means finding a theme that matches atom syntax coloring
Atom One? I use it despite never using Atom. One Monokai is also cool.

If Atom and VS Code are slow why are they used at all?

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argumentum_ad_populum

You can do /hack/ it, do almost whatever you want with it.

Just use vim faggot

But isn't that for linux only? Also I heard its hard to learn at first

On Windows? VS Code, unless you are a literal RAMlet with half a GB of RAM then you should upgrade or kill yourself.

>If Atom and VS Code are slow why are they used at all?

Because they aren't

>But isn't that for linux only
No. Every OS runs vim

There's a Windows version. But don't use it, and this is coming from a hardcore Vim fan. The benefits from Vim are the keybindings / modal editing, and you can have that with Vim mode in VS Code, plus IntelliSense and all the good stuff.

What theme and font do I use on my vs code

>text editor
Notepad++ hands down
VS Code is more of an IDE.

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GNU Emacs

lol windows

jetbrain IDE are less pajeet binary bloated

Why use atom over vscode?

social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/vstudio/en-US/4dfa92ad-f5fe-4143-99f0-7756a4320b2d/vs-2017-community-offline-download-how-many-gb?forum=vssetup

Spacemacs.
I installed it yesterday, fucking awesome

Is as hardbto learn as vim?
t. Ramlet that cant run vscode

All Jow Forumswindtoddlers can talk about for 2 months is being able to run linux on windows, and they still haven't figured out vim is the best text editor.

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No, Geany is. It came from Linux and is cross compiled for Windows. Written in C and has features without taking 12 years to start.

it uses more ram than what existed in 20th century

>notepad++

Pythons built-in/included editor is fine. Probably best if you're beginning

Vscode. Install the python extension and you're good to go.
If you're doing a large project you should use IDE like pycharm tho, but since you ask this kind of question I think you're a beginner.

>Which one for Python
editors dont work according to languages so any editor can get the job done

vs code, atom, sublime, n++

> I wouldn't use it for things like C#.

It has reference counting, detects unit tests, refactoring options, and a debugger for C#

Im fat, so atom and notepad++

VSCodium is VS Code minus the botnet.

Vscode is pretty good but it's a bit heavy for a text editor, use np++ for that
I use vscode for Python, C# and rust on Windows and it works good for that.

Notepad++ on Windows 10
Notepad++ with WINE on GNU+Linux

EMACS for Windows.

emacs

if you want bloat go with spacemacs

just like install neovim lol

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Font?

If you are building .NET core apps VS Code is pretty capable. Save windows forms, WPF, and UWP for Visual Studio.

Iosevka

>tho

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>Atom
>700mb for a text editor is acceptable now
At least VSCode is only 200 and has IntelliSense (r)(tm) to justify it.

N++ is valid though. Emacs builds for Windows are pretty good as well.

github.com/neoclide/coc.nvim

That settles it.
Use vim or emacs.

both are objectively worse in both terms of performance and features

Thanks.

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>Windows

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thanks user, i'm gonna learn vim now.

atom, so much lighter than vs code vs CODE SUCKS BRO

Read

The real question is when will Notepad# be released?