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BBEdit 13.0

Download BBEdit 13.0

BBEdit is the leading professional HTML and text editor for the Mac.

As the “go to” tool for web site designers, web application developers, writers, and software developers, this award-winning product provides an abundance of high-performance features for editing, searching, and manipulation of text, code, and HTML/XML markup.

An intelligent interface provides easy access to BBEdit’s best-of-class features, including: grep pattern matching; search and replace across multiple files; project definition tools; function navigation and syntax coloring for numerous source code languages; code folding; FTP and SFTP open and save; AppleScript and Automator support; Unix scripting support; text and code completion; a complete set of robust HTML tools; and more.

BBEdit offers a 30-day evaluation period (beginning the first time you use it on your computer), during which its full feature set is available.

During the evaluation period, BBEdit is fully functional. After the evaluation period has expired, you can continue to use BBEdit for free, forever, with no nag screens or unsolicited interruptions.

In “free mode”, BBEdit provides a modified set of features, which incorporates a powerful set of core features. Using BBEdit in free mode costs you nothing, while providing an upgrade path to advanced features and capabilities.

To enable BBEdit’s advanced features after the evaluation period is over, you will need to have an active BBEdit subscription. Subscriptions are available on either a monthly or annual basis.

An active subscription gives you access to all of BBEdit’s advanced features, including any new features that we introduce during updates or major upgrades, for as long as the subscription is in good standing.

Please see our comparison chart for a detailed listing of which advanced features are available with a subscription.

Subscription terms and conditions:

  • We do not collect any data from your use of BBEdit, whether or not a subscription is in effect.
  • Your interactions with BBEdit and with Bare Bones Software, Inc. are protected by our privacy policy.
  • Your use of BBEdit is governed by the terms of its end-user license.
  • When you purchase a subscription, payment will be charged to your iTunes Account upon confirmation of purchase.

Your subscription will renew automatically, unless you cancel your subscription at least 24 hours prior to the end of the currently active subscription period. Your iTunes Account will be charged for the renewal within 24 hours prior to the end of the currently active subscription period, and your account history will reflect the cost of the renewal.

You can manage your subscription and cancel automatic renewal by going to your “Manage my Subscriptions” page after purchase.

Purchasing a subscription will permanently end your evaluation period, and forfeits any unused portion of the evaluation period, if applicable.

For the full text of the BBEdit end user license for Mac App Store customers, please visit this page on our web site: https://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit/appstore/terms.html

With BBEdit, you can…

  • Exercise Total Control Over Text
  • Work YOUR Way
  • Command Files, Folders, Disks, and Servers
  • Enjoy Textual Omnipotence
  • Live Up To Standards
  • Integrate Smoothly Into Existing Workflows

Information

CompatibilitymacOS 10.14.1 or later, 64-bit processor
LanguagesEnglish

What’s New in BBEdit 13.0

Additions:

  • The “Pattern Playground” window provides an interactive interface for experimenting with the behavior of Grep patterns (regular expressions). This makes the process of creating complicated patterns much less trial-and-error, since you can see exactly what will match, and how, before committing to any irreversible actions.
  • A complete description of the pattern playground is in the Pattern Playground Notes.
  • Added the Grep Cheat Sheet. This appears as a popup menu button in the Find, Multi-File Search, and Pattern Playground windows; as well as in the “Process Lines Containing”, “Process Duplicates”, and “Sort Lines” dialog boxes. The button pops up a menu that provides some common Grep pattern idioms and brief descriptions; choosing one will insert it literally into the pattern and select it (replacing anything that has been selected). In the Find and Multi-File Search windows, choosing an item from the cheat sheet also turns on the “Grep” option.
  • BBEdit allows you to make rectangular selections in documents for which “Soft Wrap Text” is turned on. Note that the rectangular selections are made in the actual text, not in the visual representation; and so if the rectangular selection crosses a wrapped line, the wrapped portion of the line will not be highlighted.
  • When editing the search string in the Find window, any matches for it will highlight in the “target” document window (usually the one immediately behind the window). (This works for Grep patterns too, as long as the pattern is valid.) This allows basic previewing of the effects of a Find All or Replace All operation.
  • There are two new commands on the “Select” submenu of the Edit menu:
  • Highlighted Matches: selects matches found using the “Display instances of selected text” feature.
  • Live Search Results: selects matches found while searching using the Live Search feature. (Note that this is only available while keyboard focus is in the Live Search search box.)
  • “Find & Select All” on the Search menu does what it says: based on the current search string and options, it will select all matches for the string (or pattern, if grep is turned on). This may also be used from within the Find window.
  • The “Appearance” preferences have been changed: the old “Match application appearance to selected editor color scheme” setting is gone. All the confusion and weirdness involving color schemes and Dark Mode has been swept away. In its place is a much simpler setting: “Application Appearance”. Each respective setting does what it says on the tin:
  • “Use system appearance”: follow the setting in the “General” system preferences. If you are using “Automatic” on macOS Catalina, the application will change accordingly.
  • “Light”: uses the Light appearance, even if the General system preference is set to Dark (or the system has been set to dark mode automatically).
  • “Dark”: uses the Dark appearance, even if the General system preference is set to Light (or the system has been set to light mode automatically).
  • Complete list of changes can be found here

Screenshots

Name BBEdit v13.0 mac-torrents.net.zip
Size 27.79 MB
Created on 2019-10-08 14:12:53
Hash d0af191b459fd95f7d97e53faebfc03dcd7ab55f
Files BBEdit v13.0 mac-torrents.net.zip (27.79 MB)

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BBEdit 12.6.1

 BBEdit 12.6.1 free download for mac torrent

Name BBEdit.12.6.1.zip
Size 14.62 MB
Created on 2019-03-10 05:03:37
Hash f5447077313aa47cbbf5c01c00e6896609c89a45
Files BBEdit.12.6.1.zip (14.62 MB)

Download

BBEdit 12.6.1 macOS

BBEdit is the leading professional HTML and text editor for the Macintosh. Specifically crafted in response to the needs of Web authors and software developers, this award-winning product provides an abundance of high-performance features for editing, searching, and manipulation of text.

With BBEdit, you can…
  • Exercise Total Control Over Text
  • Work YOUR Way
  • Command Files, Folders, Disks, and Servers
  • Enjoy Textual Omnipotence
  • Live Up To Standards
  • Integrate Smoothly Into Existing Workflows
What’s new in BBEdit 12?
  • Improved darktheme support When using a dark color scheme, BBEdit now colors editing and project window chrome to match, for a more integrated overall appearance. (For customers used to the old behavior, this can be set in the “Appearance” preferences.) For customers who have never before used BBEdit or TextWrangler, the “BBEdit Dark” color scheme is now the factory default; this can be changed if desired in the “Text Colors” preferences.
  • Improved platform behavior Thanks to extensive internal overhaul, BBEdit now supports intrinsic OS behaviors such as Split View (and many others).
  • Improved UI for FTP/SFTP Browsers, Text Factory, and Preview windows many nonediting windows have been overhauled for improved appearance and behavior, and to add features.
  • New “Canonize” tool Provides a textbased model for batch search and replace, either within a single file or (by using a Text Factory) in multiple files.
  • New “Columns” Editing Commands Easily cut, copy, delete, or rearrange columns in delimited (CSV, TSV) text files without requiring a spreadsheet or complicated regular expressions.
  • FTP/SFTP browsers now feature an outline view for improved navigation
  • Text Factory windows now provide the ability to turn individual steps on and off
  • Preview in BBEdit windows now provide runtime introspection of previewed pages using the WebKit Inspector
  • Text Extraction This powerful addition to BBEdit’s legendary searching capabilities allows you to locate and collect search results into a single text document. Extraction can be run on the active text document, or across multiple files and folders. Use of Grep replacement patterns during extraction enables transformations to the extracted text.
  • Extensive Internal Modernization Many internal subsystems have been rewritten or updated to support new features, improve performance, add refinement, and make future enhancements possible

Requires macOS 10.6 or later

Web Site: http://www.barebones.com/products/

What’s New in BBEdit 12.6.1

Additions & Changes
This update consists only of fixes for reported issues, and does not include any new features, nor are there any visible changes to existing features.
Fixes
  • When running on macOS 10.14.1 and later, if /usr/local/bin/ and/or /usr/local/share/man/man1/ don’t exist, BBEdit will try to create them before asking the system to complete installation of the command line tools. If this fails you will get a useful message, rather than a silent failure to install the tools.
  • Fixed a performance bug in which BBEdit would always ask a language module to do a keyword lookup, even when the module did not explicitly report that it supported lookups.
  • Fixed bug in which the filename extensiontolanguage mapping inappropriately conflated extensions and base file names; so if (for example) you opened foo.php, and then subsequently opened the php executable, BBEdit would try to treat the latter as a PHP file. This never ended well.
  • Although you should always specify which text to include when using the make new line AppleScript construction, BBEdit will no longer crash when you fail to do so. In the absence of any text, a single blank line is assumed.
  • Fixed a bug in which the application’s test for determining the usability of an automatically located Unix tool did not always return the correct answer. This would break things like inapplication Python script execution.
  • Worked around macOS sandboxing bug in which certain ssh operations which required socket access to sshagent would fail. A common case of this was SSH multiplexing, but certain forms of key access would fail to. This in turn broke the builtin SFTP support, typically resulting in 22807 errors when trying to connect to SFTP servers.
  • Fixed a bug in which changes to the print settings in the Print panel didn’t take effect, nor did they persist.
  • Made internal changes in the SFTP client implementation to work around stability issues caused by an OS bug when running on macOS 10.12.6.
  • Fixed bug in which cancelling an SFTP connection attempt would be “sticky”, and cause future connection attempts to fail until the FTP/SFTP browser window in which the connection was created was closed.
  • Fixed a bug in which running a text factory from the Scripts menu with no previously specified sources would prompt for sources and options, and then do nothing.
  • Fixed bug in which the “Options” sheet for a “Run Unix Filter” text factory operation would refuse to appear if a Unix script had previously been selected, but was missing.
  • Fixed a bug in which the applicationmodal progress panel (used for a few things, like remote file transfers and folder compares) did not properly update itself as requested by the task being performed (for example, the name of a folder/file being compared, or the amount of data transferred).
  • Worked around macOS sandboxing bug (48537807) which caused AppleScript recording to be nonfunctional.
  • Fixed bug in which a PHP function declaration with a nullable return type would cause that function to be omitted from the functions menu.
  • Added some keywords to PHP for builtin types.
  • Fixed a bug in which files which began with a #! were inappropriately guessed as HTML, if they contained something recognizable as HTML (such as HTML code in a heredoc or string).
  • Worked around an OS behavior in which the dictation system would cause insertion of a naked carriage return (ASCII 13) when dictating “new line”. This would appear as a gremlin.
  • Added a thirdparty application to the AppleEvent entitlements so that ODB support works with it (com.agile.teambase).
  • If a Unix text filter returns a nonzero exit code, BBEdit will do nothing and report an error, instead of replacing the selection (or document contents) with nothing.
  • Fixed bug in which bbdiff /dev/null /path/to/some/file did not activate the application.
  • “Apply Text Filter” and “Paste Using Filter” are (once again) allowed in the edit fields in the Find and MultiFile Search windows.
  • Fixed a performance regression when running AppleScripts from the Scripts menu or other sources, particularly when the script performed a large quantity of operations which involved sending events to BBEdit.
  • Made a change to the way new files are created on disk when performing a Save As, to see if that fixes a reported symptom with newdocument saves requiring authentication.
  • Made a change to work around an OS bug (46341124) in which the OS would refuse to resolve certain file references created by older versions of the application, and return an inscrutable error.
  • The builtin software updater once again accurately checks for whether you’re able to install the updated application, and thus can appropriately decide to download the update disk image, instead of trying (and failing) to selfupdate.
  • Added the async keyword to the JavaScript language module, and fixed a bug in which its presence in a function assignment would cause the function scanner to list it as “[anonymous]” in the function menu.

Screenshots

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BBEdit 12.6.1