I am a big fan of Notepad++ in windows and I have been using Notepadqq, a linux clone. Lately though, I have been experiencing more and more crashes and bugs with it. Looking for advice and wisdom. Is there something better? Should I stick it out and try and troubleshoot my problems with Notepadqq?

Edit: Just wanted to thank everyone for all the great advice! I know people can sometimes be territorial and/or religious about their choices here, but people in this thread were helpful and informative, so thank you!

I am trying out Notepad Next but I also installed Notepad++ with Wine. Both seem promising, thanks.

  • HouseWolf@pawb.social
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    1 day ago

    I also used Notepadqq for the first year I used Linux, I ended up switching to Kate since it did everything I liked about Notepad++ and it came installed with my KDE desktop soooo.

    Also for the few times I gotta use a terminal text editor I use Micro (It really should be the default instead of Nano)

    • brax@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      Fuck you.

      Love,
      Neovim

      (Just meming, emacs is actually pretty cool tbh and you probably are too.)

    • callcc@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      With emacs you don’t learn once, nor twice but at least 100 times. but seriously, it’s a very nice editor that you either fall for life or not at all.

  • golden_zealot@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Helix, Kakoune, build Codium from source would be my suggestions.

    I use Helix now mainly - I use Codium if I need a graphical editor for something, or one of it’s plugins.

    At work the systems use VSCode but I use the Dance plugin with Helix bindings to get some of that functionality back.

  • techpir8@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Sublime isn’t freeware but it also doesn’t seem to have any nags if you use it beyond 30 days. Up to your own software morals if you decide to pay the $99 for it or not but it is a rock solid editor and may be worth the money.

    • groet@feddit.org
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      1 day ago

      Absolutely love sublime. Im not entirely sure but if I remember correctly they are perfectly fine with you using it for free as along as you don’t use it commercially. I used it for free during university and then at work I just asked if they will buy me a personal license since I am much faster with sublime than without and had all my keybinds and python scrips for automation.

  • PotatoesFall@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 day ago

    What kind of text editing do you do? Coding? Config files? Hard to recommend if we don’t know the use case :P

    If you want to get into terminal text-editors, I recommend https://helix-editor.com/ . It’s modal like vi/vim/neovim etc., but has much easier and more intuitive keybinds, and comes batteries-included and doesn’t require extensions.

    Downsides: Not fully mature, there’s no extension support so not suited for very niche use-cases. And if you ever have to administrate a server through SSH, it will likely only have vim which has different motions and keybinds.

    Been using it for 99% of my coding for three ish years, very happy.

  • pineapple@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Vim!

    If you really don’t want to then try kwrite for something more simple or kate for a full IDE. There both developed by kde and been around for a while.

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    If push comes to shove, you can still use Notepad++ under Wine. It works.

    I use Kate for my editing needs, fast and good regexp work, which is important for me.

  • juipeltje@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I prefer editing in the terminal, but when it comes to gui editors i’ve heard a lot of good things about kate and geany.

      • Señor Mono@feddit.org
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        1 day ago

        If three out of three platforms isn’t enough, you might want to go with vim. I guess it is ported to all platforms available.

        Sublime is a text-editor on steroids. It has so many good extensions, it feels like an IDE.

        Anyhow: paying for good software is a no-brainer, if it safes you troubles and time, and especially if yourself are a dev, too (depending on others to also pay for your work). Also there are fair company licenses in case a firm is involved.

        And finally: you can use sublime without paying. There will he a pop up dialog every 50 start or so. It’s really not annoying and fair.

        • TurboWafflz@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Ahh I guess if the target is being more IDE like then that kind of makes sense. I usually want barely anything but an editor with an LSP and auto formatter. I would be annoyed by the lack of BSD, Haiku, Illumos, etc support, but I guess if you don’t use those it doesn’t matter too much. Being closed source is still kind of a downer though for something like that, you would think they could adopt a scheme like some other paid software where you can pay for premade releases if you don’t want to compile it yourself

    • xylogx@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      I have gotten a lot of great feedback to this post, but if I had to give points for the most spot-on answer, you would get it. Thanks!