Best Text Editors for Scheme

Find and compare the best Text Editors for Scheme in 2024

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

  • 1
    Notepad++ Reviews
    Top Pick
    Notepad++ is a Notepad replacement and source code editor that is free and supports multiple languages. It runs in MS Windows and is subject to the GNU General Public License. Notepad++, which is based on Scintilla's powerful editing component, is written in C++. It uses pure Win32 APIs and STL to ensure a faster execution speed and smaller programs. Notepad++ strives to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by optimizing as many routines and as user-friendly as possible. The PC can use less CPU power to throttle down and reduce power consumption. This results in a greener environment.
  • 2
    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.
  • 3
    Spacemacs Reviews
    A community-driven Emacs distribution. Emacs and Vim are not the best editors, it's Emacs! Spacemacs is a new way of using Emacs. It's a sophisticated and polished setup that focuses on ergonomics, mnemonics, and consistency. Mnemonic prefixes such as b for buffer, project, s search, help, and h for help are used to organize key bindings. Innovative real-time display for all key bindings. A simple query system allows you to quickly find layers, packages, and other information. Due to a set of conventions, similar functionalities will have the same key binding everywhere. Community-driven configuration allows for curated packages that are tuned by power users. Bugs can be fixed quickly.
  • 4
    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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