Pulsar: A Community-Led Open Source Code Editor to Continue the … – It's FOSS News

Posted under Programming, Technology On By James Steward

Pulsar aims to be a replacement for Atom users, and could challenge Visual Studio code as its development progresses further.
It is no surprise that Microsoft decided to kill the Atom text editor to favor Visual Studio Code.
If you did not know, you could take a glance through our older coverage:
While you may have had better options, Atom was an impressive tool when it was popular.
A community build for it is already available; however, there seems to be a new version (Pulsar) that aims to bring feature parity with the original Atom and introduce modern features and updated architecture.
As per its documentation, the original team that worked on Atom-Community is now involved with creating Pulsar. The reason why they made a separate fork is because of different goals for the projects.
Pulsar wants to modernize everything to present a successor to Atom.
Of course, the user interface is much of the same. Considering Pulsar hasn’t had a stable release yet, the branding could sometimes seem all over the place.
However, the essentials seem to be there with the documentation, packages, and features like the ability to install packages from Git repositories.
The key feature highlights for Pulsar, as per the official website, include:
At the time of writing this, automatic updates for Pulsar are not available. You will be able to install newer versions through the official website.
You can customize the editor, change keybindings, manage packages, apply themes, and configure your experience with all the available options.
As of now, it is too soon to say if Pulsar will become something better than what the Atom community version offers. However, it is something that we can keep an eye on.
As mentioned earlier, Pulsar is in its early development stage. So, you can find binaries for Linux distributions and AppImage file that you can try on any distro.
In my test, it did not work for Linux Mint, but it worked fine with Ubuntu 22.04 LTS.
You can head to its official download page to get the package required for your system and test it out.

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Note that any programming tips and code writing requires some knowledge of computer programming. Please, be careful if you do not know what you are doing…

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