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Vlad Preobrazhensky2014-03-29 13:47:42
linux
Vlad Preobrazhensky, 2014-03-29 13:47:42

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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13 answer(s)
K
Kirill Platonov, 2014-03-29
@DOC1e421

1) Ubuntu
2) www.jetbrains.com/ruby/index.html
But I don't like IDE so www.sublimetext.com
Photoshop on ubuntu

M
Maxim Moseychuk, 2014-03-29
@fshp

with dreamweaver

Yes, you are a master of declination.

T
tushev, 2014-03-29
@tushev

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.

M
maxaon, 2014-03-29
@maxaon

1. Ubuntu, Mint
2. Jetbrains RubyMine so you don't have to worry about setting up the environment.

A
awesome-kun, 2014-03-29
@awesome-kun

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.

K
Konstantin Velichko, 2014-03-29
@Zoxon

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

D
Deerenaros, 2014-03-29
@Deerenaros

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.

T
tmin10, 2014-04-02
@tmin10

Ubuntu+NetBeans IDE
The most convenient cross-platform IDE with support for a bunch of languages.

R
Ruslan Tovmasyan, 2014-03-29
@sanslar

1) Any. Ubuntu if you don't want to customize.
2) Brackets, Sublime Text.

E
Eddy_Em, 2014-03-29
@Eddy_Em

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

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Luka Pechkov, 2014-03-30
@CoffeeAndNews

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.

V
Vlad Preobrazhensky, 2014-04-01
@DOC1e421

Who uses what web editors? And why?

A
Alexander Schilling, 2015-01-19
@dignityinside

Phpstorm is better so far they haven't come up with anything.

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