Already worked on both for some time now and I will not leave Aptana for big works. Atom - free and open-source text editor with out-of-the-box PHP support. gedit comes with Gnome desktop package, it is free,open source and.
Yeah you are right, gedit comes by default, not only with Ubuntu but also with other Linux based OS e.g Fedora,Linux Mint,Debian etc, which uses GNOME as a desktop environment. Aptana is much better than the IDE from Microsoft let me tell you right now. Vow gedit is best, it is already installed on my Ubuntu. Aptana is very complex and will certainly resolve any doubt you have with its complete help system and autocomplete, autohelp way of working. The last method I recommend is Aptana, which is a complete GUI IDE system. This text editor supports more than 50 programming.
Open your terminal and enter following command to install it in Ubuntu Linux. Jam-packed with many features, Notepad++ has an amazing execution speed, making it apt for modern machines. Although it does not comes by default with Ubuntu Linux, but installing it in Ubuntu Linux is very simple. You can install it by running sudo apt-get install codeblocks. Emacs is an extensible and customized text editor which is most commonly used and perhaps has greater number of features then any other open source text editor. The one I have used so far was Code::Blocks 8.02 but 10.05 came out a couple of months ago and it looks good. Works right out the box, no errors, no nothing. If you want to use any other editor, use the appropriate command instead of code.
It works the same way as gcc: Compiling a test.cpp file using g++ by typing: g++ test.cpp -o mytest, which will create a file called mytest (which is executable by typing. Then just press CTRL+ X and press Y, then ENTER to save and close.Ĭompile this test.c file using gcc by typing: gcc test.c -o mytest, which will create a file called mytest (which is executable by typing. To start programming in the console, just type nano test.c that way you start working on your first test.c file. Just ALT+ F2 and type gnome-terminal or press CTRL+ ALT+ T to start a console. You have the standard gcc that comes with Ubuntu.