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Tech1mo ago

Microsoft Open-Sources Command-Line Editor Edit 2.0: Supports Syntax Highlighting and is Under 300KB

Microsoft's command-line text editor Edit, open-sourced last year, has received a 2.0.0 update, adding syntax highlighting. The Linux version is only 294KB in size. The biggest change in Edit 2.0 is the addition of syntax highlighting support, covering a variety of languages such as plain text, Diff, GitHub Commit/Rebase, Ignore, JavaScript, JSON, LSH, Markdown, PowerShell, Properties, Python, Shell, Script, XML, and YAML.

Microsoft Open-Sources Command-Line Editor Edit 2.0: Supports Syntax Highlighting and is Under 300KB

This feature adds only about 40KB in size, and you can switch highlighting languages by clicking XML in the lower left corner.

Other updates include: find and replace supporting regular expression capture groups ($1, etc.), new editing enhancements such as moving lines and batch indentation, file lists changed to natural sorting, preliminary support for settings.json configuration files, and fixes for numerous Unicode and cross-platform related issues.

Edit's core positioning is as a lightweight terminal editor, and its support for mouse operation is its biggest feature, making it more user-friendly for those unfamiliar with Vim keybindings.

Edit supports Windows, Linux, and macOS platforms, but the Windows version is nearly 2MB in size, a significant difference from the Linux version's 294KB.