![]() I’ve barely scratched the surface of what lies underneath, and look forward to where the project’s Roadmap leads.Ĭheck out the helpful documentation and get started if you like. I’ve been using the Atom Material UI theme with some simple customizations. Gist-it allows you to easily post files (or current selection) from Atom to GitHub Gists. Gist-itĪtom has a nice way to save and deal with Snippets natively, but I sometimes prefer to share and save Gists. From there, you can click the definition and go directly to where it’s defined. Just open the Color Picker with the cursor at a variable and it’ll look up the definition for you. It also inspects Sass and LESS color variables. Currently reads HEX, HEXa, RGB, RGBa, HSL, HSLa, HSV, HSVa, VEC3 and VEC4 colors – and is able to convert between the formats. Right click and select Color Picker, or hit CMD-SHIFT-C/CTRL-ALT-C to open it. Markdown Preview Plus provides a realtime preview of any markdown file you’re working on. This is a simple tool to just highlight the current line, which can be customized as well. Just a simple nuance to help visually distinguish one file type from another, and who does not like icons? Highlight-line The file-icons package adds file type icons to the Tree View, Fuzzy Finder and Tabs. Also, there is a contextual menu that allows you to convert Hex to RGB(A), and vice versa. It also comes with a lot of handy features, like Pigments: Show Palette, which can show the current project’s palette from the command palette (Cmd+Shft+P / Ctrl+Shft+P). The Pigments package sources your code for any colors, then displays and builds a palette. Pigmentsįor anyone that does a lot of CSS, Less, or Sass, this is a must-have. Minimaps has a growing library of other packages in which it integrates nicely. The minimap package shows a preview of source code along the side of the current file you’re working on. Here are a few packages I’ve found useful in my daily coding practices: minimap Why should I switch when I’m comfortable, and can ship code just as quick as the next person? So it was not until I had family vacation and knew I would have some downtime to try out Atom, and gave it a try.Ītom comes with dozens of pre-installed packages, as well as a few themes which can be switched on-and-off and tweaked to your heart’s desire. There is also a library of community contributed packages and themes. Obviously, the learning curve and installation seem to be the biggest obstacles. I’ve always been hesitant to make the jump mostly because of the productivity death effect switching can have. It seems that there can be allegiances to editors that can really rile people up. ![]() I tried switching to Sublime Text a few times, and never successfully gave it a chance, but instead decided to dive right in with Atom. It has been a few months since I’ve transitioned from using Panic’s Coda 2 to using Github’s Atom editor as my main application for working with code. ![]()
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