Atom (Wikipedia) is a multi-platform code editor that is itself based on Chromium. Turtles aside, Atom has a growing community and base of installable plugins and themes.
You can download and install via links from the main Atom site. If you're interested in checking out the code and contributing, see the developer page.
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A typical Atom workflow consists of the following.
- Use
Ctrl-Shift-R
to find a symbol in the.tags
file orCtrl-P
to find a file by name. - Switch between the header and the source using
Alt-O
(Ctrl-Opt-S
on OSX). - While editing,
you-complete-me
package helps with C++ auto-completion and shows compile errors throughlint
package. - Press
Ctrl-Shift-P
and typeformat<Enter>
to format the code. - Select the target to build by pressing
F7
and typing, for example,base_unittests
. - Rebuild again by pressing
F9
.
To setup this workflow, install Atom packages for Chrome development.
$ apm install build build-ninja clang-format \
linter linter-cpplint linter-eslint switch-header-source you-complete-me
Install C++ auto-completion engine.
$ git clone https://github.com/Valloric/ycmd.git ~/.ycmd
$ cd ~/.ycmd
$ ./build.py --clang-completer
On Mac, replace the last command above with the following.
$ ./build.py --clang-completer --system-libclang
Install JavaScript linter for Blink web tests.
$ npm install -g eslint eslint-config-google
Configure the JavaScript linter to use the Google style by default by replacing
the contents of ~/.eslintrc
with the following.
{
"extends": "google",
"env": {
"browser": true
}
}
Configure Atom by replacing the contents of ~/.atom/config.cson
with the
following. Replace <path-of-your-home-dir>
and
<path-of-your-chrome-checkout>
with the actual full paths of your home
directory and chrome checkout. For example, these can be /Users/bob
and
/Users/bob/chrome/src
.
"*":
# Configure ninja builder.
"build-ninja":
ninjaOptions: [
# The number of jobs to use when running ninja. Adjust to taste.
"-j10"
]
subdirs: [
# The location of your build.ninja file.
"out/gn"
]
# Do not auto-format entire files on save.
"clang-format":
formatCOnSave: false
formatCPlusPlusOnSave: false
core:
# Treat .h files as C++.
customFileTypes:
"source.cpp": [
"h"
]
# Don't send metrics if you're working on anything sensitive.
disabledPackages: [
"metrics"
"exception-reporting"
]
# Use spaces instead of tabs.
editor:
tabType: "soft"
# Show lint errors only when you save the file.
linter:
lintOnFly: false
# Configure JavaScript lint.
"linter-eslint":
eslintrcPath: "<path-of-your-home-dir>/.eslintrc"
useGlobalEslint: true
# Don't show ignored files in the project file browser.
"tree-view":
hideIgnoredNames: true
hideVcsIgnoredFiles: true
# Configure C++ autocomplete and lint.
"you-complete-me":
globalExtraConfig: "<path-of-your-chrome-checkout>/tools/vim/chromium.ycm_extra_conf.py"
ycmdPath: "<path-of-your-home-dir>/.ycmd/"
# Java uses 4 space indents and 100 character lines.
".java.source":
editor:
preferredLineLength: 100
tabLength: 4
Atom fuzzy file finder is slow to index all files in Chrome. If you're working
on a project that frequently uses foo
or bar
in files names, you can create
a small .tags
file to efficiently search the symbols within these files. Be
sure to use "Exuberant Ctags."
$ git ls | egrep -i "foo|bar" | ctags -f .tags -L -
Don't create a ctags file for the full Chrome repository, as that would result in ~9GB tag file that will not be usable in Atom.