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What is the best web editor for Linux?
It so happened that it's not destiny to work with Windows, but I don't want to part with Dreamweaver and Photoshop at all.
1) Advise the fastest and most convenient Linux distribution.
2) Please tell me a powerful web editor for Linux that is not inferior to Dreamweaver.
30.03 I installed Linux Mint 16 Mate.
31.03 Installed Linux Mint 16 Cinnamon.
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1) Ubuntu
2) www.jetbrains.com/ruby/index.html
But I don't like IDE so www.sublimetext.com
Photoshop on ubuntu
After switching to Linux, I also tried to find sane analogues. But I didn't find anything good. Everything is either buggy and incomplete, or very little functional.
Therefore, I installed VirtualBox, Windows on it, and Windows software there, for which there are no good analogues in Linux. Set up shared folders between host and guest systems, and happy.
1. Ubuntu, Mint
2. Jetbrains RubyMine so you don't have to worry about setting up the environment.
1) Ubuntu, maybe it's worth waiting for the release of 14.04 LTS (support for 5 years), due out on April 17th.
2) Brackets is very promising, it already has great functionality.
1)
Elementary OS
Ubuntu
2)
Vim
Sublime Text 2, 3
You won't get a full-fledged Photoshop anyway, if you can run it at all. Get ready for crashes and glitches
It's strange that no one mentioned Atom . True, it is under development, but it seems that it can be assembled - a promising project.
In general, there are probably three ways.
Kostylny: run under wine, or install a virtual machine. In fact, installing a virtual machine is quite justified, since in this case you get a clean system, which you can then quickly deploy anywhere and not get anything extra. The truth is all the same - to put * nix, and on it Windows for the sake of Dreamweaver is not ice.
Normal: sublime text. Under it there are many best and good practice , it is really very customizable and at the same time quite convenient.
Unix way:vim. Out of the box, it’s not very beautiful, but a couple of settings - and already glow with all the lights. Usability is high even without settings. From pluses - works and under ssh it is not bad. Of the minuses - a long acclimatization. But then it will be difficult to return anywhere.
Also, I often hear about webstorm - a powerful thing. And with ruby , jetbrains is doing well. True, the products are paid, but there is no extra money to try (a couple of weeks is hardly enough for one project, so I didn’t even try it).
With photoshop everything is good and bad at the same time. Bad - the alternative is, in fact, one - gimp. Okay - gimp is very good. Super Documentation(which, unfortunately, now I can not boot). Seriously - many things that are possible in phototoad are also possible here, and there are also some features that are not in phototoad.
UPD.
Distribution - I myself use ArchLinux. But this is a rather complicated option, although a slight feeling of euphoria comes from the documentation. I do not want to go anywhere now, because Ubuntu for me now is a powerful and complex Chinese combine without normal documentation, which is not clear how it works. So I prefer the plow - even if you work a lot with your hands, but it's easy to fix. Yes, and the documentation for this plow is on the level.
I tried to switch to debian a little more, when there were problems with too new drivers. In general, the impressions are good. But there is still a taste of innuendo. Yes, and its stability is exaggerated - the driver I needed turned out to be too old =) And I didn’t get the goodies I needed. So I rolled back to the opensource driver and said goodbye to toys. I also tried Mint. Actually, a very nice distro. Nimble, beautiful and convenient as far as Linux can be. That is, it is really very fast, but a little not beautiful, and sometimes there is a certain feeling of inconvenience (however, compared to windows, with which I have this feeling almost constantly, everything is not so bad).
In general, to reduce the degree of nerdiness (but increase the amount of magic):
ArchLinux, Debian, Mint, Ubuntu.
Ubuntu+NetBeans IDE
The most convenient cross-platform IDE with support for a bunch of languages.
1) Any. Ubuntu if you don't want to customize.
2) Brackets, Sublime Text.
1) Gentoo or Slackware, the rest have fallen into UG.
2) I personally like geany: I draw html, css, jaboscript, and server-side CGI in it
1) Sublime Text 2 & Sublime Text 3
2) I choose it as the most convenient, fast editor.
* Just download from the site and there, through the console,
unzip and run it in linux itself.
Phpstorm is better so far they haven't come up with anything.
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