Ah, découvert il y a longtemps pas moyen de m'en souvenir.
Codiad was built with simplicity in mind, allowing for fast, interactive development without the massive overhead of some of the larger desktop editors. That being said even users of IDE's such as Eclipse, NetBeans and Aptana are finding Codiad's simplicity to be a huge benefit. While simplicity was key, we didn't skimp on features and have a team of dedicated developer actively adding more.
Support for 40+ languages
Plugin Library
Error checking & notifications
Mutliple user support
Editor screen splitting
LocalStorage redundancy
Advanced searching tools
Smart auto-complete
Real-Time Collaborative editing
Over 20 Syntax color themes
Completely Open-Source
Easily customized source
Runs on your own server
Quick-Download backups
Maximum editor screen space
i18n Language Support
You might look at Python code every day, but what is the lens through which you view code? It's your text editor. This article was written for Python Magazine and was first in a series on Python development environments. Here, we look at how Vim users can boost their productivity by having Vim tell you as much as possible about your program, while you're writing it.
It has come to my attention that somebody ‘round these parts has been preaching the gospel of Sublime Text 3. Well, as the resident senior developer (err, old fogey), I feel it’s my duty to provide a counterexample by way of the only TRUE Python development environment you will ever need – and that environment is of course VIM. That’s right. VIM is ubiquitous, fast, and never crashes. And it can do just about anything!
Several modern GUI editors list your open buffers as tabs along the top or bottom of your screen (VisualStudio, DreamWeaver, EditPlus and UltraEdit come to mind), now we have this feature in VIM!
You can quickly switch buffers by double-clicking the appropriate "tab" (if you don't want to use the mouse just put the cursor on the "tab" and press enter). As you open and close buffers the tabs get updated. Buffers that are modified get visually marked and buffers that are open in a window get visually marked. The -MiniBufferExplorer- opens automatically when you open more than one eligible buffer (no need to open the explorer if you’re only editing one file.) -MiniBufExplorer- doesn't bother showing non-modifiable or hidden buffers. You can delete buffers by selecting them and pressing d on the keyboard.
When you are in the -MiniBufExplorer- window, Tab and Shift-Tab move forward and backward respectively through the buffer list.
There are a growing number of optional features in this script that are enabled by letting variables in your .vimrc:
control + the vim direction keys [hjkl] can be made to move you between windows.
control + arrow keys can be made to do the same thing
control + tab & shift + control + tab can be setup to switch through your open windows (like in MS Windows)
control + tab & shift + control + tab can alternatively be setup to cycle forwards and backwards through your modifiable buffers in the current window