It's now been put into the macosxhints production cycle, as I'm using it for the daily hint publication (including this one) - though I'm still falling back on jEdit for working on the site's PHP and HTML files, as the in-program SFTP support is just so convenient. As of version 2.0, it's got a very polished feel, and has very nearly every feature I find important in a text editor.
Overall, I'm very impressed with Smultron 2.0, especially given that it's open source and free (donations are accepted). You can also run Unix commands, and the Services menu is fully functional, unlike in jEdit, so I can use the rvice to format my text into XHTML. It also has a number of other little things that seem to annoy me, so I don't use it much.The other upsides of Smultron over jEdit are also quite nice - my Textpander shortcuts work perfectly, and there's on-the-fly spell checking.
Some are probably saying 'BBEdit is it, why muck with anything else?' Well, BBEdit doesn't support split windows with different files in each split, and that's probably the most important item on my list. Smultron, unfortunately, lacks this feature, but it does allow itself to be registered as the external editor for FTP/SFTP apps, such as Transmit, which is at least a halfway solution. jEdit has a very nice File System Browser that shows the directory structure and file for the currently-active directory, be it local or remote.
In Smultron, Command-T will close the open tag. In jEdit, typing will close the presently-opened HTML tag. Smultron 2.0 now allows a single horizontal split, with a different file open in the split area. I use split view all the time with a CSS file open in one split, and an HTML file in another, so I can easily see the class assignments. But just one simple horizontal split is really enough for me. jEdit can actually do this vertically and horizontally, as many times as you have the screen real estate to handle.
There's also no on-the-fly spellchecking, which I find nicer than running my completed text through a spell checker. This impacts my workflow (I have to toggle out/in of jEdit to make a new shortcut work), but the feature set in jEdit keeps me coming back. However, the main downside of jEdit is that it's written in Java, and Textpander (now TextExpander shortcuts just don't work right in jEdit (it's got something to do with the pasteboard). For many years, jEdit has been my editor of choice - not necessarily because I find its interface the prettiest, nor its features the easiest to use and figure out, but simply because it has the right combination of features I'm looking for (more on that in a bit). Smultron 12.5.I'm always on the lookout for nice text editors.
It has all the powerful features when you need them – like syntax colors for over 90 code languages, regular expressions, commands, text snippets, line numbers and many more. Smultron is powerful and confident without being complicated. Although Smultron is suitable for basic text editing, it excels at programming because it codes language in different colors depending on what it represents. Store your documents in iCloud and access them on your Mac, iPhone and iPad. Smultron macOS Torrent is the text editor for all of us.
Documents can be organized by projects and separated using tabs on the program’s interface. With it, you can view a document on full-screen, split the editor into two parts, or view it separately.
Smultron Cracked is the most advanced text editor application designed with an elegant user interface to be easy and intuitive to get started with but it also has more powerful features when you need them. The viewing of documents is another of Smultron’s strengths.