
Like Atom, Sublime Text and Visual Code Studio Adobe’s editor can also be extended using extensions. Alongside inline editing, split view and preprocessor support Brackets also offers a live preview. This feature can be hooked up to a web browser to allow developers to see exactly what the changes they’re making look like in real-world use.

The app, which supports HTML, CSS, LESS, and SASS, is notable for including a number of helpful visual tools that can help developers in quickly make quick changes and tweaks to their code. The app was first released back in 2013, and has been updated and improved regularly since then. The Brackets 1.10 changelog has a more meaty rundown of everything that’s new in this release What is Brackets?īrackets is an open source code editor for web developers, written in web technologies like JavaScript, HTML and CSS. The latest release of the editor also saves search history, making recent queries accessible from the search bar introduces inline CSS code hints and fixes a number of bugs. This is a welcome integration tweak that renders the app’s formerly HTML menus as better looking native ones.īrackets 1.10 also supports more than 40 different file encodings adds backward/forward navigation in editor history and now lets users disable (and later enable) any of the default extensions that ship as part of the browser.


Yes, the latest stable release of the popular code editor fixes a long standing want for many of its Linux fans by enabling native menus on Linux. A new version of Adobe Brackets is available to download, and it finally brings native menus to Linux.
