Posted by: Administrator
on October 13, 2005 04:23 AM
I use Gnome, and it has GEdit.
It's a basic text editor, by Linux standards, which is a bit more than you get from Notepad. It has tabs like FireFox... Though lots of things in Linux seem to have tabs, the whole freak'n desktop has tabs. (If you use Gnome and it doesn't seem to have desktop tabs, right click a taskbar, click "Add to Panel" and then find and add "Workspace Switcher".)
It also has highlighting for a whole bunch of languages, including XHTML, CSS and Perl and PHP and etc.
You can change the font. I don't see "Fixedsys" here, but I do see a "Fixed"... If you have a copy of "Fixedsys" laying around in a TTF file, copy it to this directory:<nobr> <wbr></nobr>/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/TTF/
If it's one of those retro<nobr> <wbr></nobr>.fon files from retro Windows, I have no idea what to do with it then<nobr> <wbr></nobr>:S
I second that
Posted by: Administrator on October 13, 2005 04:23 AMIt's a basic text editor, by Linux standards, which is a bit more than you get from Notepad. It has tabs like FireFox... Though lots of things in Linux seem to have tabs, the whole freak'n desktop has tabs. (If you use Gnome and it doesn't seem to have desktop tabs, right click a taskbar, click "Add to Panel" and then find and add "Workspace Switcher".)
It also has highlighting for a whole bunch of languages, including XHTML, CSS and Perl and PHP and etc.
You can change the font. I don't see "Fixedsys" here, but I do see a "Fixed"... If you have a copy of "Fixedsys" laying around in a TTF file, copy it to this directory:<nobr> <wbr></nobr>/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/TTF/
If it's one of those retro<nobr> <wbr></nobr>.fon files from retro Windows, I have no idea what to do with it then<nobr> <wbr></nobr>:S
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