I am a big fan of Notepad++ in windows and I have been using Notepadqq, a linux clone. Lately though, I have been experiencing more and more crashes and bugs with it. Looking for advice and wisdom. Is there something better? Should I stick it out and try and troubleshoot my problems with Notepadqq?
Edit: Just wanted to thank everyone for all the great advice! I know people can sometimes be territorial and/or religious about their choices here, but people in this thread were helpful and informative, so thank you!
I am trying out Notepad Next but I also installed Notepad++ with Wine. Both seem promising, thanks.
- If you want a GUI, Kate is my favorite. Otherwise Neovim - I have been using kate a bit and it has been a decent experience so far. - Try Kwrite. I’ve liked it a lot more than Kate. - FYI Kate and Kwrite use the same code base under the hood but display with different UIs. - https://kate-editor.org/post/2022/2022-03-31-kate-ate-kwrite/ - I know. That’s why I’m saying it’s worth trying…for the improved UI. 
 
 
- I get random crashes from kate in the last few versions (appimage). But other than that, it’s the best foss gui code editor. 
 
 
- If you want a gui editor maybe Kate? - +1 for Kate 
 
- Sublime Text. On any platform. Nimble, mighty, extendable. - I’m a big fan of Sublime. It’s powerful while also good at getting out of the way 
- Paying for a text editor seems weird, especially one that’s closed source and only supports 3 platforms - If three out of three platforms isn’t enough, you might want to go with vim. I guess it is ported to all platforms available. - Sublime is a text-editor on steroids. It has so many good extensions, it feels like an IDE. - Anyhow: paying for good software is a no-brainer, if it safes you troubles and time, and especially if yourself are a dev, too (depending on others to also pay for your work). Also there are fair company licenses in case a firm is involved. - And finally: you can use sublime without paying. There will he a pop up dialog every 50 start or so. It’s really not annoying and fair. - Ahh I guess if the target is being more IDE like then that kind of makes sense. I usually want barely anything but an editor with an LSP and auto formatter. I would be annoyed by the lack of BSD, Haiku, Illumos, etc support, but I guess if you don’t use those it doesn’t matter too much. Being closed source is still kind of a downer though for something like that, you would think they could adopt a scheme like some other paid software where you can pay for premade releases if you don’t want to compile it yourself 
 
 
 
- Notepadqq not the best reimplementation of notepad++ I am using NotepadNext https://github.com/dail8859/NotepadNext - I have gotten a lot of great feedback to this post, but if I had to give points for the most spot-on answer, you would get it. Thanks! 
 
- VSCodium, or some similar VSCode build/derivative. - I know, I know, but the critical mass is just so useful. As a random example, there are specific extensions to support game modding in Paradox scripting language, or Rimworld XML. Nothing else has so many random niches filled. - It’s fast with big files (faster than anything I’ve tried other than ‘specialized’ log readers and such), it’s a fast search, it’s got good git support, it’s got support for sudo file editing… - Nothing else has so many random niches filled. - I don’t know the VSCode ecosystem at all – but you you know the emacs one? 
- Pretty much everyone at work is using VSCode, maybe this is a good opportunity to dive in, thanks. 
 
- Text editors are a really personal choice and there are a million different ones. I use either Kate or Micro. Both are great for my use. - Fair point. I have worn many hats through my IT career, I started out as a Windows NT admin back when it was cutting edge technology in the 90s. I fell in love with a text editor called Ultraedit that my org had a site license for. When I left that org after many years I missed Ultraedit and was delighted to find Notepad++ had most of features I loved. Now the course of my career has found me become a Linux admin and personal linux user for many years now. I have been using Notedpad-qq for years, but recently it seems to have gotten worse and I have had instances where crashes resulted in lost data. I liked the idea of having the same general UI and features as Notepad++ because I still need to use Windows at work. But I am reluctantly admitting maybe it is a time for a change. - Apologies for the digression, but I wanted to share some of the waypoints in my journey that influenced my personal choice. 
 
- Try Geany if you don’t want a heavyweight; it’s in the repos. IMHO pretty similar to notepadqq. - BTW, I also have trouble with Qt apps crashing/freezing on Debian Stable. What distro/version are you on? 
- Why don’t you just use the one you like? Wine isn’t the clunky near-useless thing it once was, you can probably just run the Notepad++ installer and use it like any other app. - I see it is Platinum on WineHQ, will give that a try thanks. - https://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=application&iId=2983 
 
- Emacs has entered the chat. - With emacs you don’t learn once, nor twice but at least 100 times. but seriously, it’s a very nice editor that you either fall for life or not at all. - I used it for a couple of years then stopped 🫣 org mode was nice. except for on mobile. except if you wanted images. and discovering the right packages was a bit of a chore - it was fun while it lasted tho 
 
- Fuck you. - Love, 
 Neovim- (Just meming, emacs is actually pretty cool tbh and you probably are too.) 
 
- I also used Notepadqq for the first year I used Linux, I ended up switching to Kate since it did everything I liked about Notepad++ and it came installed with my KDE desktop soooo. - Also for the few times I gotta use a terminal text editor I use Micro (It really should be the default instead of Nano) 
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- deleted by creator - I think I once tried vanilla SciTE and did not like it. Geany does a good job of packaging it into a well-integrated code-editor with IDE functionality. 
 
- If push comes to shove, you can still use Notepad++ under Wine. It works. - I use Kate for my editing needs, fast and good regexp work, which is important for me. 
- Neovim is the way and here’s imo why: - Vim keybinds: yes, we take more time editing then actually writing text/code so it’s faster to use a modal text editor, you just have to learn it a bit at the start. Vim language is easy, you just tell it what you want it to do (ie. diw: delete inner word, ciw: change inner word etc.)
- highly customisable, even if you don’t want to cherry pick your plugins and choose a config, there are many out of the box configured (lazyvvim comes to mind but there are many)
- if you’re a developer you can find plugins for everything you need, debugger, lsp, autocompletion etc.
 
- The Solaris version of vi, hardened against escape to shell and with no quality of life improvements. Builds character. - I also recommend giving up electricity and motor vehicles, real men calculate subnet masks by hand. 










