UltraEdit for Mac was officially released this month. A favorite of Windows developers, UltraEdit was first released in 1994 as one of the earliest “Notepad” replacement text editors for programmers on Windows.
When you use your computer for programming, you live in your text editor. Mac developers love TextMate’s project management and plug-ins, BBEdit’s built-in code validation, or its freeware sibling TextWrangler’s fantastic find and replace. For web development, I use Coda with built in syntax highlighting, source code versioning and a CSS editing mode.
But for Windows users, switching from Windows to Mac has meant giving up a favorite Windows editor, which can feel disorienting. TUAW readers who switched from Windows have been wanting UltraEdit for years, some even running Windows in a VM (virtual machine) just for their text editor. Back in 2007, reader Jon Niola commented, “As a switcher, the app I miss most on Windows is UltraEdit… I wrote to IDM (makers of UltraEdit) to ask them if they were ever going to port to OS X and … it sounds like it is something they are headed towards eventually.”
After fifteen years, it’s here.
Continue reading UltraEdit makes the leap to Mac OS X
UltraEdit makes the leap to Mac OS X originally appeared on TUAW on Fri, 31 Dec 2010 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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