Re: [gedit-list] The plugin mentality



I was thinking about the same issue lately, when I had to explain a co-worker that gedit compares really well to editors like E or TextMate once you have it properly configured with plugins.

Perhaps a more elegant way (than having all plugins installed by default) would be an "Add-ons" menu like in Firefox.

Of course there would be required a github repository or something similar. Most gedit plugins I installed don't seem to live on the official gnome site but come from some random blogs.

Perhaps a gedit plugin could be developed which would be able to access the repo then download and extract the plugins requested by the user?

--
Sebastian Posch

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http://www.sebastianposch.at/download/agb.pdf



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Today's Topics:

    1.  The plugin mentality (Thomas Biggs)


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Message: 1
Date: Wed, 1 Dec 2010 13:09:15 -0800 (PST)
From: Thomas Biggs<tnbiggs yahoo com>
To: gedit-list gnome org
Subject: [gedit-list] The plugin mentality
Message-ID:<660062 60361 qm web83909 mail sp1 yahoo com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

By supporting plugins, gedit leaves basic features out of its editor.

It reminds me of shopping for a really cheap car where you have to special order
even the most basic things. "You want seat belts? We can have those installed.
Windsheld wipers? What are you, some kind of picky troublemaker?"

Now days most text editors have such basic features as block column editing,
sorting, and syntax editing for a handful of languages (C++, Java, Python)
built-in. With these editors, no matter what machine you log into, you know
these features will be there.  Not gedit. It reminds me of ancient text editors
like Notepad--useful only for very basic tasks. Certainly Linux deserves better
than this.

I think that because of plugins, people don't think of putting in these basic
features. "You want column editing? We can have that installed!"


I think that mentallity is a big mistake. I use gedit on different machines, not
all necessarily configured by me. It would be wonderful if I could count on a
few more modern but still basic capabilities built into the default text editor.

     -tom
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