July 28, 2014 kevinsawicki
Now that the Windows Alpha is out, it is a great time to start building and testing your Atom packages on Windows.
Read moreJuly 24, 2014 benogle
One very common pattern we’ve seen in packages is highlighting bits of the editor. A package might add an icon to line numbers, colorize lines, or draw a rectangle around a word.
Read moreJuly 22, 2014 benogle
As of Atom version 0.116.0
, we now enable the new React editor component by default.
July 9, 2014 kevinsawicki
Today, we are happy to announce that Atom is now available on Windows. This is an alpha release that supports Windows 7 and Windows 8.
Read moreJuly 2, 2014 nathansobo
June 23, 2014 izuzak
It’s been a while since our last package roundup. In the meantime, the number of packages has grown to over 850, so we wanted to share a few more packages we found interesting and useful.
Read moreJune 9, 2014 thedaniel
May 6, 2014 nathansobo
Today, we’re excited to announce that we are open-sourcing Atom under the MIT License. We see Atom as a perfect complement to GitHub’s primary mission of building better software by working together. Atom is a long-term investment, and GitHub will continue to support its development with a dedicated team going forward. But we also know that we can’t achieve our vision for Atom alone. As Emacs and Vim have demonstrated over the past three decades, if you want to build a thriving, long-lasting community around a text editor, it has to be open source.
Read moreApril 25, 2014 kevinsawicki
Looking to get your Atom package building on CI so that pull requests are updated automatically when tests pass or fail?
Read moreMarch 31, 2014 nathansobo
If you’ve been watching the Atom organization closely on GitHub, you may have noticed that we’ve open-sourced Atom’s keymap module. In this post, we’ll start with a brief overview of how Atom’s keymap works, then explore recent changes that give it better support for for ambiguous multi-keystroke bindings and vim-mode.
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