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The standalone code editor powered by JavaScript and Chromium is available for free under the MIT license ...
Ten weeks ago, code-hosting giant GitHub introduced its latest creation: a text editor named Atom. Now, the company is opening it up to the public after an apparently successful invite-only phase.
Launched in 2011, Atom is a free and open-source text and source code editor for software developers working on a range of operating systems.
At Facebook, developers have already used Atom to build their own Atom, a text editor called Nuclide that's tailored for use with the unusually enormous amount of code that runs the Facebook empire.
OS X (Win/Linux coming soon): Atom, the text editor from the folks at GitHub and one of your favorites, is now open source and free to download and use.
After introducing an updated version of the popular Atom code editor -- and facing a deluge of more than 4,000 open issues -- GitHub is changing the way it handles bug reports, feature requests and ...
Both the Visual Studio Code and Atom open source code editors, which share Electron-based technology roots, have come out with updates this week.
The direct integration with the code-hosting platform to make things easier for devs -- but also ties them more closely to GitHub GitHub’s Atom, the Node.js- and HTML5-powered code editor, has ...
Microsoft-owned GitHub announced it will sunset its popular Atom 'hackable text editor' late this year as it concentrates on cloud-based dev tooling.
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