Platform: Windows, Linux, BSD, OS/2 |
Platform: Windows, Linux, BSD, OS/2, BeOS?, Mac |
*Small size |
*Builds with Qt 4,5,6 *Supported build subsystems: cmake, meson, qmake *Small binary size *Minimal IDE features |
*Text analyzer called UNITAZ |
*Open PDF and Djvu as text *Search text in files *Text analysis |
*"Open at cursor"-function for HTML-files and images *Misc [X]HTML tools |
*"Open at cursor"-function for HTML, LaTeX-files and images *Misc [X]HTML and LaTeX tools |
*String-handling functions such as sorting, reverse, format killing, trimming, filtering, conversions etc. |
*String-handling functions such as sorting, reverse, reformat, trimming, filtering, conversions etc. |
*Built-in image viewer (PNG, JPEG, GIF, WBMP, BMP, SVG) |
*Built-in image viewer (PNG, JPEG, GIF, WBMP, BMP, SVG), scaler and converter |
TEA is the Qt-based text editor for Linux, *BSD, OS/2 and Windows
Author: Peter Semiletov Homepage: http://semiletov.org/tea Github page: https://github.com/psemiletov/tea-qt Family: LinuxEditorFamily Platform: Windows, Linux, BSD, OS/2, BeOS?, Mac License: GPL
There are two branches of TEA - the multi-platform Qt-based branch, and UNIX-only outdated GTK2/3 branch. The first versions of TEA was freeware, closed source program written in Borland Delphi at the year 2000. Then, at 2003, TEA was rewritten for Linux, with C/GTK+2, and rewritten again for C++/Qt? at 2007. During the years of development, all TEA versions shares the same functions and GUI elements.
TEA features are: