Yeah, it's unfortunate because I love the idea of Atom, and of course that it's free with no fuss to install wherever whenever at whatever number of times, and that the source is open. Simply a modern version of an extensible, easy to use editor and I think definitely has its place even despite what was already there in terms of editors.
However, I'm personally on Visual Studio Code now, which shares similar ideas on platform and extensibility, although it's not quite as great there as Atom. But good enough for me, and much faster. Good enough for me to not "need" Sublime Text, and to have a pretty convenient development experience in e.g. Go and scripting languages in terms of coding support features.
However, I'm personally on Visual Studio Code now, which shares similar ideas on platform and extensibility, although it's not quite as great there as Atom. But good enough for me, and much faster. Good enough for me to not "need" Sublime Text, and to have a pretty convenient development experience in e.g. Go and scripting languages in terms of coding support features.