I hear that TextMate is very good (the Ruby On Rails people seem to like it), and I tried SubEthaEdit for it's collaborative possibilities once (many editors can work on one document at once - scary!) VIM Others As I cannot really vouch for other text editors on the Mac here is a (far too) comprehensive list of text and other editors available. (not intended as an advert - I just end up using this every time, especially after evaluating others - JB) It will also open HUGE files and not fall over. Has a built in FTP/SFTP client built in (so you can open and save remote files as easily as local ones!), colourizes and formats PHP, HTML and CSS (and many, many more) perfectly and does just about everything a text editor possibly could or should do. The manufacturer's registered slogan for it is "It doesn't suck." "The best text editor money can buy" I used to think, but it has got quite bloated now, so check out others (i bought it so long ago I just pay for version updates) especially with the Smarty plugin! Alternatively, BBEdit Does the bits that SCPlugin sometimes doesn't Subcommander Cross-platform GUI for SVN. SCPlugin Finder integration for SVN, similar to TortioseSVN on Windows. CVL A graphical frontend to CVS - just about! It aims to support CVS version control system in a graphical interface but can be confusing for the beginner(!) See this page for how to set up Eclipse on Mac OS.įrankly now I use Eclipse with it's plugins pretty well exclusively. No debugger sadly, but the "Web 2.0" for AJAX and so on support is very impressive. is a very impressive web app development tool based on Eclipse, but the PHP support at the moment (June 2008) is somewhat lacking. (CVS: Concurrent Versions System, SVN Subversion - a more civilised replacement for CVS, GUI: Graphical User Interface) Eclipse is a free Open Source development IDE (Integrated Development Environment) which can be coaxed into being the only tool you need to work on TikiWiki (or any other PHP based application). Please check first the Multiplatform tools, some of which are available on Mac OS also, and they are recommended since they can be used by your colleagues who don't know (yet) how to use free softwareĪpplication types Source control GUI's (CVS & SVN)
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