![]() Maybe someday? Slowly Web Client is really the way to go. This is something I have requested, would love to use Bold, italic, bulleted lists etc like I do here at Reddit - just makes the text prettier and easier to read. It could do letter writing well also, but unfortunately Slowly does not support MarkDown or any other nice formatting. MarkText has a few different themes, so you can find one that suits your preferences. Found it a couple of months ago, and it's a lovely tool, also Freeware, simple and powerful.ĭark Theme in MarkText - no distractions, just you and your words. MarkDown editor for Blog pages :įor my Blog pages, which are composed with MarkDown text formatting, I love the MarkText editor. It also is a very clean, no-distractions interface, has various themes you can chose for the default looks. ![]() Word Counter at left bottom corner, so you know how long it's already. Letter Writing, Short stories, Fiction, your dream novel :įor letter writing, or short stories, or the beginning of longer fiction writing, I would suggest FocusWriter as it has some great features - like the Word Counter that Slowly sadly misses.įocusWriter is very good - recommended for Letter writing. Great tool!Įven on HTML, the different components show in colour, making it easier to see there's a matching close tag for any that I opened above. VS Code showing syntax highlight and indentation. It also makes indenting code easy, which turns it much more readable) (common programming commands are automatically shown in coloured text. Wow, it is great, and also for any programming - as it supports syntax highlighting and colours. □□□ Webpages, programming, HTML and CSS ?įor HTML, CSS, web development, I just started using the wonderful and free Microsoft Visual Studio Code (aka VS Code). I will add an edit with link to it, thank you. Notepad++ gets many recommendations from users in the Net, so it is a good option as well. Notepad++ supports indenting and syntax colouring, highlighting - FREE I would think it sits somewhere between EditPad and VS Code - which is really powerful and mind blowing with expansions and plugins, languages supported (described in the next section of this post). I have it installed but never took to it as well - EditPad Lite felt more like home. Notepad++ is a good free editor alternative too. All the Basics plus some Programming support? It supports multiple tabs, and a lot of nice features that the standard Notepad doesn't do well (as it's intended to just provide a simple tool for basic use).īut I do have others, which are tailored for certain jobs, and do them better, easier or faster. I have used a simple one for years, a free one called EditPad Lite.
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