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I am looking for a free editor that will support code hints/auto complete for THREE js.
Preferably a plugin for notepad++ but I will try just about any IDE that is free. I have heard that sublime 2 supports it but I want something I can use for free.
Also, I have tried to use Tern for Eclipse but for the life of me I can not get it to work.
Does anyone know of a good THREEjs editor or some magic way to get tern to work properly in Eclipse (using Latest Eclipse Java EE distribution)?
Editors
JavaScript editors are more useful to develop the scripting very quickly .
According to your question we may develop the three js by using Bracket IDE(as i mentioned in comment). But look into the Atom.io editor also. Atom is similar to Bracket but it has some more features than bracket.
Performance
Sublime is written in C, which makes it fast. Atom, as well as Brackets, are developed on a node+webkit platform .
Atom has its own custom version called "atom-shell" which means that they both are nothing more than just an advanced webapp and because of that - they will never be as fast as Sublime.
Atom and Bracket supports more language , even Atom is supported many language more than bracket too.
Links :
Atom Editor Link
Bracket Editor Link
Happy Coding.. !
brackets.io has out of box support for THREE js. Downloaded and working in 5min.
If you are doing anything with Three js and want something free and super easy with auto complete support this is a great editor.
Thank you vinohd for the link.
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I'm wondering if there is some software that makes creating websites easier like a "Photoshop" with buttons and menus for front-end development. Or do people just code the whole thing in a text editor?
I'm asking because I came across a video about "Webflow" and it seems like building a website using tools like this would be much faster for professionals than coding it.
Do professionals use any tools like this? If so which are the most popular?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJ3vsAnbi_o
Many thanks!
Well, there are two approaches here:
1. Online Websites creators
There are many online tools for creating websites. The most popular are:
Unbounce
Wix
These tools allow you to create websites without edit any line of code.
1. Professional web development:
when I started working with HTML and JavaScript, in 2006, I started with the Windows Notepad, and this helped me a lot to memorize all the tags. Some years ago, I worked with Adobe Dreamweaver as well.
Today, the most popular editors among front-end engineers are MS Visual Code and Atom. These are free/open source and excellent editors. There are many other popular editors as well. I used Visual Code and Atom for a long time. Today I'm using Webstorm from Jetbrains. Webstorm is a very powerful JavaScript IDE (it's free for college students).
Most of the front-end developers use UI frameworks to develop UI elements such as Buttons, Forms, Boxes, etc. Twitter Bootstrap is the most famous UI framework today, however, there is a bunch of UI frameworks available. You can also develop UI elements only coding native HTML and CSS for styling.
This is just the tip of the iceberg. There are many great tools available on the web.
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I have an idea of a cool tool for pretty much any text editor. To implement my idea I need to be able to:
Find the beginning and the end of the block of code where a statement is located. The number of lines for the declaration of the function and the corresponding closing bracket in JavaScript would be the dream.
Find every occurrence of the specified variable in a file.
This requires some syntax analysis of the target language. I really don't have much preference for the language of the API and the language being examined. Is there an easy-to-use tool for this?
I've been Googling this question for some time, and haven't found an obvious answer for the easiest way to do what I want. I only have opening code for Eclipse's editor to find the solution in mind right now. Atom's scope Descriptors seem unwilling to return numbers of lines for scope declarations.
I found out that I needed a proper parser for the target language to build a syntax tree of a file. I ended up using the esprima parser for JavaScript in combination with the Atom text editor, both of which are easy to delve into.
Also, it seems that the Python compiler provides an easy way to build an AST for Python code.
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I am a new bie to Javascript.
I need to start learning angular js.
I know IDE WebStorm, Sublime, Brackets.
What is good IDE for javascript? And how can I test my javascript easily.
It looks like you've tried out several editors already - which is great. I highly recommend you check out the Atom text editor which is available on Mac, Windows and Linux for free.
Some features Atom can do without you having to leave the editor & open another application:
run your code & have the output displayed in the editor
open multiple terminal sessions
run various testing suites from within the editor
Here is a YouTube video I made a few weeks ago covering more than a dozen of plugins I use for javascript development, including the three plugins I mentioned above.
There are a variety of great plugins for Atom. You can find more packages on their website.
I also made a comprehensive list of Atom editor plugins to install.
Webstorm is best, especially with angular
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I am developing a javascript application. Rite now i am using E text editor
http://www.e-texteditor.com
I have used UltraEdit also but i found E-text editor better.
I want to know if there is any other editor more powerful than E-text editor?
and what better facilities it has?
What editor should you use? Vim of course! I mean Emacs!
I mean, seriously. There is nothing more personal for a programmer than a choice of his editor. Not even the choice of his language is more personal so I doubt you'll get any meaningful answers other than "You should use my favorite editor! Because it's the best." "No, you should use mine! Because it's better."
Unless you just want to see a flame war then, well, have fun.
I don't think you'll really find an editor specifically geared towards js, I think you've found what I would choose if you are stuck on a windows platform ;)
I personally use TextMate which is what E-texteditor is modeled after, and if you can harness the specific bundles for any given language you can have some real productivity increases. You can find framework specific bundles also that include snippets, shortcuts, etc...
But the thing I like about editors like these, there isn't so much automation that you loose touch with the language. At its core it's still a text editor.
Well i also was looking for a better Javascript editor for some time. However I finally ended up with Aptana since i noticed that is pretty much supportive with Javascript developments.
Obviously it's not an editor but an IDE which is a derivative of eclipse. The thing is that there are lots of libraries and frameworks for Javascript so we can't expect that our editor or IDE is supported with all these.
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I'm looking for a framework or library to create SVG images. It should run in the browser, so it should be based on Flash or maybe JavaScript. Up to now I found the Flash library by inevo.pt, the SVG editing component of Dojox, and some little JavaScript tools.
Is there anything else, preferrably stable and mature?
Thanks a lot in advance!
-- Andreas
Exporting to svg is a pretty easy step to take.
Draw & Export to svg from FLASH
Example
Have you seen Raphael? http://raphaeljs.com/ This is a JS drawing framework that renders in SVG, Canvas, or VML depending on browser capabilities.
SVG-Edit (demo) is coming along nicely. It's a basic editor which the developers plan to move to a plugin architecture to enable third-party tools. It integrates nicely with the MoinMoin wiki, to allow inline editable diagrams etc.
I think within a year there will be several good open source editors available, using different base JS libraries, now that the ground has been broken by svg-edit
Not really sure why you'd want this. Inkscape is cool but doesn't run in a browser.
I think i have some on http://svg.startpagina.nl
Have you tried Amaya http://www.w3.org/Amaya/