I'd also pay on linux for UE. Reason: Very fast, has column mode, one click upcase/lower case conversion, sort, and other features.
Count me in for one vote too....
As been said by others, I state it again:
column mode
strong regular expression support
strong macro support
conversions between charactersets,upper or lower case etc.
endless... all the features listed and are mentioned as marketing catches
I *NEED* UltraEdit to have a life with Linux desktops..... Or does that sound too desperatre??
As been said by others, I state it again:
column mode
strong regular expression support
strong macro support
conversions between charactersets,upper or lower case etc.
endless... all the features listed and are mentioned as marketing catches
I *NEED* UltraEdit to have a life with Linux desktops..... Or does that sound too desperatre??
I'd just like to add my vote as well.
I'm a user of Ultraedit for a few months now on a Win98 installation under Win4Lin. I've been running Linux for many years.
I'm a user of Ultraedit for a few months now on a Win98 installation under Win4Lin. I've been running Linux for many years.
Just wanted to drop my 10c worth....
I would pay a premium $$$ for UE on linux.
It is the only thing keeping me from ditching winsucks permanently!
Let it be known to the UE masters- there is a HUGE market for this.
I would pay a premium $$$ for UE on linux.
It is the only thing keeping me from ditching winsucks permanently!
Let it be known to the UE masters- there is a HUGE market for this.
- 20
I have been playing with Linux for about 1 year. During this period, I tried many editors the Linux community has to offer. To name a fiew, Vim, emacs, xemacs, gedit, nedt, kate, SciTE, jEdit (and maybe otheres), but none of them can satisfy my editing need. They either lack some features or are clumsy at user interaction.
I would also be very, very, very willing to pay for UE Linux version.
But, DO NOT MAKE IT OPEN SOURCE!.
I would also be very, very, very willing to pay for UE Linux version.
But, DO NOT MAKE IT OPEN SOURCE!.
Oh my... I would pay big bucks if UE was ported to linux. I love ultraedit and there is nothing that compares to it.
I've just started a new job where I use linux and I cannot find a full featured gui based editor. I've used Ultredit for years and would definitely pay for a linux version.
I have been using UltraEdit for something like five years. I've gotten two companies to spend a measley $35 (or whatever it is now) for a really good tool. I swear by it. Great stuff.
I'm working in a place now where LInux is a better desktop choice, though I'm holding out on a Windows box with a few others. One of the reasons is that Kate doesn't make me as productive as UltraEdit. Stuck on Windows for one program. The horror.
If another vote for a Linux version of UltraEdit matters to your plans, please count mine.
I'm working in a place now where LInux is a better desktop choice, though I'm holding out on a Windows box with a few others. One of the reasons is that Kate doesn't make me as productive as UltraEdit. Stuck on Windows for one program. The horror.
If another vote for a Linux version of UltraEdit matters to your plans, please count mine.
Please, please do it.
I'm another entusiastic UltraEdit user, but my desktop is switching to be linux only in very few time (like all the others in my company).
The usage of wine it's really annoying.
Ian if you're reading this thread make a lot of people happy, do it.
I'm another entusiastic UltraEdit user, but my desktop is switching to be linux only in very few time (like all the others in my company).
The usage of wine it's really annoying.
Ian if you're reading this thread make a lot of people happy, do it.
+100000000
I'll pay whatever the cost to have UE on Linux.
Yea, I know there is another thread on this topic, but I don't care I'm voting here. What is frustrating is I know that the UE Studio must have taken some time to develop, in the long run I bet more money would be made making the standard UE for Linux (even if it can't be ported, start over and copy the functionality found in Windows UE).
I'll pay whatever the cost to have UE on Linux.
Yea, I know there is another thread on this topic, but I don't care I'm voting here. What is frustrating is I know that the UE Studio must have taken some time to develop, in the long run I bet more money would be made making the standard UE for Linux (even if it can't be ported, start over and copy the functionality found in Windows UE).
For what I do, mostly Verilog coding with some C++, Emacs has features UltraEdit will never have. Although I still don't like Emacs. It's not about the features, but rather the interface.
- 1
hi,
please add my vote too. i have an lifetime license for ultraedit. but now i have kicked off windows an could not find anything like ultraedit on linux.
i have a lifetime license, yes. but i will pay a bit extra for a linux license.
PLEEEAASSE
please add my vote too. i have an lifetime license for ultraedit. but now i have kicked off windows an could not find anything like ultraedit on linux.
i have a lifetime license, yes. but i will pay a bit extra for a linux license.
PLEEEAASSE
And one more request!
And I tried several: Nedit, Jedit, beaver, Scite, Emacs, vim/gvim and many more...
Not to offend anyone or start wars but..
Nedit? User interface WAY outdated..
Jedit? Try opening a really large file..
Scite? Buggy, missing features compared to UE..
Emacs? Maddening keybindings, jump-ahead scroll, column mode does not compare to UE.
vim? Use it all the time for editing config files, perfect. But I cannot think in vi-mode and program at the same time
The only one I quite liked was Crisp, but it's commercial at a price tag of $250!! Even if UE for Linux were tagged $100 it'd still be MUCH cheaper than that.
PLEASE bring UE to Linux.
+N
And I tried several: Nedit, Jedit, beaver, Scite, Emacs, vim/gvim and many more...
Not to offend anyone or start wars but..
Nedit? User interface WAY outdated..
Jedit? Try opening a really large file..
Scite? Buggy, missing features compared to UE..
Emacs? Maddening keybindings, jump-ahead scroll, column mode does not compare to UE.
vim? Use it all the time for editing config files, perfect. But I cannot think in vi-mode and program at the same time
The only one I quite liked was Crisp, but it's commercial at a price tag of $250!! Even if UE for Linux were tagged $100 it'd still be MUCH cheaper than that.
PLEASE bring UE to Linux.
+N