News
GitHub Inc. today announced new integration with the open source Atom code editor and a beta of its GitHub Desktop app. Both provide developers with new ways of working with the GitHub software ...
GitHub’s Atom, the Node.js- and HTML5-powered code editor, has traditionally integrated with Git repositories—including GitHub itself—only by way of third-party components.
GitHub, perhaps known more for hosting open source code repositories than building code editors, last week released Atom 1.7 and a beta of the next version, 1.8. The new stable version includes ...
Meanwhile, GitHub explained why it's sunsetting Atom, which debuted in 2015 and is closely tied to the Electron Framework, which just happens to be the main framework that enables the cross-platform ...
The GitHub team started working on Atom six years ago, with active development taking place for more than 2.5 years. The goal was to make a text editor that they would use for the rest of their lives.
It's ironic that cloud-hosted VS Code is part of the future while Atom isn't, as Atom tech was closely tied to the Electron project (formerly named Atom Shell), whose bits were used as the basis for ...
Windows: Atom, the free text editor from the folks at Github (and one of our favorite text editors ), now has an official Windows version. It's an al ...
GitHub has an Electron-based editor called Atom, and Visual Studio Code is based on it. With Atom being cross-platform, it's no great surprise that Visual Studio Code is, too.
Windows/Mac/Linux: Atom, GitHub’s free text editor, has been toiling away in beta builds for a while now. Today, it’s officially available as a stable version. Atom is still open source and ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results