![]() ![]() This software is stable, surprisingly light and totally reliable during heavy workflow. Thinking about Open Source is thinking about bugs, unfinished features and slow updates…mostly, but not with Brackets. I was intrigued but not impressed and I put it aside, waiting for him to grow: and I was right.Ĭurrently at the release 0.44 Brackets is my default code editor, and I use it both for personally and professionally. At that time I was using mostly Dreamweaver, so I was expecting from Brackets all the things that I used to have, like a built-in FTP, Database integration, snippets, pre-made code, project manager and whatever. It was really basic with just a bunch of features, kinda glitchy and with a really minimal interface. I started using Brackets during the release of the version 0.23 Spring, and it was….ok…sort of. ![]() It’s released under the MIT License and the source code is hosted on GitHub. The others are less obvious and more technical, and I really suggest you to keep reading if you’re still not convinced.īefore digging into it a bit of story about Bracketsīrackets is an Open Source code editor specifically built for web designers and front-end developers by Adobe. or at least this should be one of the main reason.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |