![]() ![]() ASCII Table : This table contains all the ASCII characters and their correspondence in Decimal, Hex, and HTML code.Thanks to this summary, we can quickly see the structures that make up the file we are editing. Depending on the programming language we are writing, a series of data or others will appear. Code Explorer : shown here is a summary of the functions, arrays, files imported, etc.The program has a series of tools to ease the programming: For example, if we are creating a web page, we will create a new Project and include all the files related to that Project: HTML, CSS, Javascript, and PHP. We can use this editor to edit individual files or create a Project that spans multiple files, and this way, when we open an existing Project, all the files related to that Project will be opened. This program supports syntax highlighting of many programming languages: C/C++, Fortran, HTML, CSS, MS-DOS Batch, Java, Javascript, PHP, Python, Perl, Object Pascal, Visual Basic, XML, and more. A little hobby knife for crafts and very precise work.Īll of these tools do the same basic thing (cutting), yet aside from that and being made in some kind of steel (ceramic knives are bad), all of them have no common attributes, and they are not appropriate for the same kind of work.PSPad is a powerful tool that allows programmers to focus on solving a problem using source code and forget about the tasks that distract them from the code. A less cheap huge carbon survival knife because I like toys after all. ![]() A relatively cheap, thick and huge carbon steel survival knife, which is extremely though but require taking care as to not rust. A bigger outdoor knife in stainless steel. A small fixed-blade outdoor knife with scandinavian grind, solid, easy to sharpen, and very precise for things such as wood carving. A small cooking knife for cutting veggies precisely. A rescue knife I keep in an emergency kit, with cord cutter and glass breaker. A bigger foldable knife for outdoors, camping, ang general purpose work. ![]() A small foldable knife for slightly heavier duty or eating on the go. A swiss army knife that I always carry, for small fixes, opening packages & bottles (the scissors are amazing). There are many built-in unit conversions too. Like programmer, which has a nice bit-wise display also. On windows, the calculator has a button that converts it into various specialized versions. Literally everything! Macos calc is just one simple standard calculator with only 5-6 operations. > What exactly do you see missing from the macOS Calculator, that Windows has? How do you resize the canvas? Why does drag and drop not work? Why are all the toolbars floating in the air? I downloaded paintbrush, but that is also way harder to use than paint. I have yet to figure out how which tiny inscrutable button crops the image. Even the markup tools in macos's default editor are cryptic and hard to use. And it is just simple enough that I can do everything without spending much time. MS paint is amazingly useful in so many situations. > Literally the only thing I've ever seen anyone in a professional setting use MS Paint for, is pasting the result of a screen dump, because apparently capturing to a file would have made it to convenient for the user. I guess it is a matter of getting comfortable with the UI. > For a text editor, what's wrong with any of TextMate, BBEdit, ubEthaEdit or CotEditor, to name but a few. Also i use Adobe PageMill (21 years old too) as a WYSIWYG word editor and simple site editor (like the sites i linked to) - that one can connect to the internet to upload stuff, but i use a separate (and under development) client for this.Īlso aside the possibility for security issues there is also the probability for you to face them: after all just because a program has an issue it doesn't mean you'll encounter it - if anything, nobody is going to spend any time targeting such old software. and ) - again no internet connection nor any reason to worry about their security. Similarly i use Delphi 2 and C++ Builder (both around 25 years old) now and them for making small utilities (e.g. I'm using Paint Shop Pro 7 as my main image editor, it has the best UX of any image editor i've used, was released 21 years ago and i have zero concerns about its security - not because i expect it to be secure (chances are it is using, e.g., a jpeg library with security bugs) but because there isn't any use case where that would matter. ![]()
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