Best HTML Editors for JSON

Find and compare the best HTML Editors for JSON in 2025

Use the comparison tool below to compare the top HTML Editors for JSON on the market. You can filter results by user reviews, pricing, features, platform, region, support options, integrations, and more.

  • 1
    Geany Reviews
    Geany is a lightweight, powerful and stable text editor for programmers. It doesn't slow down your work flow. It is compatible with Windows, Linux, and MacOS. It can be translated into more than 40 languages and has built-in support to more than 50 programming languages. Geany's existence was primarily due to the need for an IDE/editor that is decent, lightweight, cross-platform, flexible, and powerful. Many editors can meet some of these requirements, but not all. Geany uses the GPL v2 license to ensure that you can customize and hack it. Also, everyone benefits from the community's changes. Geany has many customizable parts, including color themes (GeanyThemes) and adding new filetypes. Geany offers many settings that allow you to adjust it to suit your needs and preferences. Many file types are supported, including popular programming languages such as C, Java, PHP and HTML.
  • 2
    Caret Reviews
    Based on the amazing Ace editing component, Caret brings professional-strength text editing to Chrome OS. Caret is a professional-grade editor for local files that targets programmers. You don't need to install another OS. Caret provides syntax highlighting for a variety of languages and all of the standard themes included with Ace, including emulations and coloring from other editors such as Eclipse, XCode and the Chrome Dev Tools. Once you get used to making multiple changes with a few keystrokes, it is difficult to go back to one cursor. Caret supports multiple selections and cursors, as well as Sublime keybindings such Ctrl/D (select the next match). You don't need to learn keyboard shortcuts. Caret will fuzzy-search your menu configuration and find the command you are looking for, and then execute it for you. You don't need to touch the mouse anymore.
  • 3
    Visual Studio Code Reviews
    Top Pick
    Code editing. Redefined Free. Open source. It runs everywhere. IntelliSense provides smart completions that go beyond syntax highlighting and autocomplete. It uses variable types, function definitions and imported modules to provide intelligent completions. You can debug code directly from the editor. You can attach or launch your apps, and debug with breakpoints, call stacks and an interactive console. It's never been easier to work with Git or other SCM providers. The editor allows you to review diffs and stage files, as well as make commits. Pull and push from any hosted SCM service. Want even more features? To add languages, themes, debuggers and connect to other services, install extensions. Extensions are separate processes that don't slow down your editor. Learn more about extensions. Microsoft Azure allows you to deploy and host your React (Angular), Vue, Node (and many more!) applications. Sites can store and query relational or document-based data and scale with serverless computing.
  • 4
    Apache NetBeans Reviews

    Apache NetBeans

    Apache Software Foundation

    Free
    4 Ratings
    Apache NetBeans (also known as Apache IDE) is a powerful, open-source Integrated Development Environment that can be used to develop applications in a variety of programming languages including Java, JavaScript PHP, HTML5, C/C++, and more. NetBeans is known for its modular architecture and offers robust tools and features to developers who work on desktop, web, and mobile applications. It has intelligent code editing, profiling, debugging and profiling features, as well as a visual GUI builder to design Java-based user interfaces. NetBeans offers support for versioning systems such as Git, SVN and Mercurial to facilitate seamless team collaboration. NetBeans is an Apache Software Foundation Project, which benefits from a community that constantly improves and expands the functionality of NetBeans. This makes it a reliable, flexible and reliable choice for developers in various domains.
  • 5
    Atom Reviews
    Atom is a hackable text editor built on Electron and inspired by our favorite editors. It is customizable but still easy to use the default configuration. Although a text editor is the heart of a developer’s toolbox, it doesn’t always work by itself. With the GitHub package, you can access Git and GitHub from Atom. You can create new branches, stage and commit, push, pull, resolve merge conflicts and view pull requests all from your editor. Atom already includes the GitHub package, so you are ready to go. Atom is compatible with all operating systems. It can be used on OS X, Windows or Linux. You can search for and install new packages, or create your own right within Atom. Atom makes it easier to write code faster thanks to its intelligent and flexible autocomplete. Browse and open files, whole projects, or multiple projects from one window.
  • 6
    CKEditor 5 Reviews
    CKEditor 5 is a modern WYSIWYG rich text editor that can easily accommodate the requirements of businesses and users in the age of digital transformation. It allows software creators and developers to build powerful writing solutions for applications of all sorts, within hours. Thanks to a fully customizable framework, ready-to-use builds, native integrations, extensive documentation, and reliable customer support, the editor can be fully tailored to your needs.
  • 7
    Nova Reviews
    If we are being honest, Mac apps have become a lost art. Although cross-platform apps are great, it's not who we are. Panic was founded in 1997 as a Mac software business. Our joy comes from creating things that feel Mac-like. Coda, an all-in one Mac web editor, was created long ago. When we began work on Nova, however, we looked at the web today and decided where we needed to go. It was time to make a fresh start. Our first-class text editor is the key to all this. It's fast, flexible, new, and super-fast. Nova supports CoffeeScript, CSS and Diff, ERB, Haml HTML, INI JavaScript, JSON. JSX, Less Lua, Markdown, Perl PHP, Ruby, Sass SCSS, Smarty SQL, TSX TypeScript, XML and YAML.
  • 8
    Quiver Reviews
    Quiver is a notebook designed for programmers. You can easily combine text, code, Markdown, and LaTeX in one note. You can also edit code with an amazing editor, preview Markdown, and instantly find any note via the full-text searching. A note in Quiver consists of cells, snippets, text, Markdown, LaTeX (via MathJax), or diagrams (sequence, flowchart). You can mix and match different types of cells within one note. You can also set different languages for different codes cells. Programmer's notebook should make code editing easy. Quiver includes the ACE code editor in code cells. It supports syntax highlighting for more than 120 languages, more than 20 themes, automatic indent/outdent, and many other features. Quiver allows you to write in Markdown, with inline formatting. Markdown is displayed in a live preview window that displays Markdown as you type. Quiver uses MathJax for typesetting mathematical equations written using LaTeX.
  • 9
    Emacs Reviews
    It is a core component of Emacs Lisp's interpreter. This Lisp dialect includes extensions that support text editing. Many file types can be edited using content-aware modes, including syntax coloring. You will find all the documentation you need, as well as a tutorial for novice users. Unicode support for almost all human scripts. Emacs Lisp code and a graphical interface make it easy to customize. You can access a wide range of functionality, beyond text editing. This includes a project planner and mail and news reader, debugger interface and calendar, IRC client and many more. A packaging system to download and install extensions. Support for arbitrary-size integers built-in HarfBuzz allows text shaping. Native support for JSON parsing Cairo drawing support improved Unexec can be replaced with portable dumping. Support for XDG conventions init files. Additional early-init initialization files. Support for tab bar and tab line built-in. ImageMagick does not support the resizing or rotation of images.
  • 10
    CudaText Reviews
    CudaText, a cross-platform text editor written in Object Pascal, is available. It is an open-source project that can be used for free, even for business. It starts quite fast on Linux on CPU Intel Core i3 3GHz. It can be extended by Python add-ons and plugins, code tree parsers and other tools. EControl engine's syntax parser has many features. Syntax highlight for a lot of languages (270+ Lexers). Code tree structure of functions/classes/etc, if lexer allows it. Multi-selections, code folding, and multi-carets. Regular expressions can be used to find/replace. Configs in JSON format. Includes lexer-specific configurations. Tabbed UI with split views to primary/secondary and a split window to the 2/3/4/6 tab groups. Command palette with fuzzy matching, micromap, and minimap. Displays unprinted whitespace and supports many encodings. Customizable hotkeys. Binary/Hex viewer to view files of unlimited size (can display 10 Gb logs).
  • 11
    jEdit Reviews
    jEdit is a text editor for mature programmers with hundreds of person-years (counting the time spent developing plugins). jEdit is a great development tool for its ease of use and features. However, it is free software that includes all source code. It is available under the terms of GPL 2.0. Built-in macro language; extensible plugin architecture. There are hundreds of plugins and macros available. Plugins can easily be downloaded and installed within jEdit by using the "plugin manger" feature. Supports many character encodings, including Unicode and UTF8. Highly configurable and customizable. You will find every other feature, both basic or advanced, in a text editor.
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