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[Discuss] Boston Linux Meeting Tomorrow, Wednesday, February 19, 2020 - Atom: A Hackable Text Editor for the 21st Century
- Subject: [Discuss] Boston Linux Meeting Tomorrow, Wednesday, February 19, 2020 - Atom: A Hackable Text Editor for the 21st Century
- From: gaf.linux at gmail.com (Jerry Feldman)
- Date: Tue, 18 Feb 2020 10:08:47 -0500
When: February 19, 2020 7:00PM (6:30PM for Q&A) Topic:? Atom: A Hackable Text Editor for the 21st Century Moderator: Jerry Feldman Location: MIT Building E-51, Room 149 *** Note: Room change. This is on the first Floor Note: Parking at E-51 is now free. See note below Please note that Wadsworth St is open from Memorial Drive to Amherst St, but is closed between Amherst St to Main St. See the ling below for additional details. https://courbanize.com/projects/mit-kendall-square/updates Note: Sorry for late notice: Our previously scheduled speaker's employer scheduled him to be out of town. Summary: Jerry shows us Atom, a graphical editor for software development Abstract: As the subject says, ?Atom is a Hackable Editor for the 21st Century?. Jerry is a long time EMACS user, but while at Red Hat, he found that EMACS was not doing a good job with Python. Another developer suggested Atom. Atom is very customizable. First, for Python, it has a number of packages that provide syntax checking, automatic indentation as well as the ability to execute code from the console. Atom also has packages to support other languages. The things I like about Atom is that it can display a list of files and their status, and a number of panes. Jerry will demonstrate how he works on applications and displays code in multiple panes. In addition, Atom supports GIT and SVN. With git you can do a an add, commit, a pull or a push. He will demonstrate that on one of his projects. Atom is fully open source. In addition to Python, Atom supports many other languages, including C, C++, Perl, JavaScript, Java, and many more. Jerry will show a list from the language indicator. Atom supports many different themes. Jerry uses the Atom Dark, but he will demonstrate others. He will also discuss the package manager. He will also demonstrate how to run the application being edited. Atom can be installed directly from the Fedora repositories via the ?dnf install? command or the software center, and in Ubuntu via the ?apt-get? command or via the Ubuntu Software Center. It may be downloaded from https://atom.io/. [atom.io] For more detailed directions see the Atom Flight Manual: https://flight-manual.atom.io/. [flight-manual.atom.io] In many cases, when you install an application from a vendor repository, that version might be somewhat out of date. However, atom will notify you if there are updates to both Atom or your packages. Jerry has tried many different editors over the years. More recently he tried Pycharm, a popular Python-oriented IDE. Pycharm is not open source, and the free version lacks many useful features. Several years ago, Jerry tested Geany, but decided that Atom was the better system for him. Attachments Atom Home:? https://atom.io/ <https://atom.io/> Installing Atom: https://flight-manual.atom.io/getting-started/sections/installing-atom/ Atom Flight Manual: https://flight-manual.atom.io/ For further information and directions please consult the BLU Web site http://www.blu.org Parking: On-Campus Free Parking (These parking lots are free after 5pm) The Amherst Street/E51 parking lot is the best parking option. It probably will have plenty of spaces. During the school year the lot tends to be full, but tends to clear out after 6:30 or 7PM. Due to the never-ending construction, Sloan's Hermann Garage is only accessible via Main Street. It is a small garage without a gate, and directly under the Sloan library. All other MIT lots require permits after hours. The closest public parking is Kendall Center Green Garage, next to the Marriott Hotel. The entrance is 90 Broadway Street. For other parking options, see http://web.mit.edu/facilities/transportation/parking/visitors/public_parking.html All Cambridge parking meters use Passport by Phone: https://www.cambridgema.gov/traffic/Parking/paybyphone This is active on all Cambridge metered parking spaces. Meters are free after 8PM For further information and directions please consult the BLU Web site http://www.blu.org -- Jerry Feldman <gaf.linux at gmail.com> Boston Linux and Unix http://www.blu.org PGP key id: 6F6BB6E7 PGP Key fingerprint: 0EDC 2FF5 53A6 8EED 84D1 3050 5715 B88D 6F6B B6E7 _______________________________________________ Announce mailing list Announce at lists.blu.org http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/announce
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