“It doesn’t suck” claims Bare Bones about its BBEdit 11, the latest version of a text editor that has been pleasing developers and writers on Macs since as far back as 1992. It’s an act of self-deprecation that downplays a tool that despite (or perhaps because of) its simplicity, is remarkably eff. BBEdit was the first freestanding text editor to use the 'PE' editing engine, and is the only one still being developed. BBEdit was available at no charge upon its initial release in 1992 but was commercialized in May 1993 with the release of version 2.5.
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BBEdit 11.1 Release Notes
BBEdit 11.1 is a feature update, which adds significant new features (in addition to those introduced in BBEdit 11.0) and which also includes fixes for reported issues.
For details on all the new features and enhancements available in BBEdit 11, please see its release notes.
For detailed information on using any of BBEdit's features, please refer to the user manual (choose 'User Manual' from BBEdit's Help menu).
Requirements
BBEdit 11.1 requires Mac OS X 10.8.5 or later
Additions
- BBEdit now has built-in support for Git. There is a Gitmenu in the menu bar, which presents available operations (mostof which may only be enabled when the active document correspondsto a file that is in a local Git working copy).The intent is not to function as a full-featured Git GUI, but ratherto support common file operations so that you can perform tasks onthe file(s) you're working on in BBEdit without having to switch tothe command line or a dedicated GUI client.
- BBEdit now supports the
EditorConfig
settings fileconvention. You can learn more about this at the EditorConfigweb site, and complete detailson BBEdit's support for EditorConfig are available in this technical note. - The Editing preferences have been rearranged slightly, sothat 'Include dictionary words in completion list' is nowproperly grouped with the rest of the completion settings. Thereis a new setting for completion: 'Include system textreplacements in completion list'. When enabled, system-wide TextReplacement triggers (configured in the 'Keyboard' systempreferences) beginning with the text you typed will now appear onthe completions popup.
- There's a new (dynamic) command on the File menu: 'SaveAll in Window'. The factory default keyboard equivalent isCommand-Option-Shift-S. This is enabled if any (or the only)document in the front window has unsaved changes; choosing itwill save all documents in the front window.
- Added a couple of alternate forms of
bblmAddFunctionToList()
to the language module interface to make it easier to write codefor the common use case of adding a single function by name. - The
bbedit
command-line tool supports two new options:--append
and--prepend
. These will append (or prepend,respectively) the piped data to the active document. Seeman bbedit
for more details. - Added an expert pref, to suppress following of allURLs in live preview windows:
defaults write -app BBEdit DontFollowLinksInLivePreviews -bool YES
When this is set, clicking on any link will have no effect, and anyURLs returned by remote form loads (such as Twitter's tracking) willnot open in a web browser when a live preview is loaded or reloaded. - The CSS/SCSS language module is all new. Folding, keywordcoloring, function navigation, and completion have all beenimproved. Various bugs are fixed.
- Added a new command to the first section of theSearch menu: 'Search in Document’s Folder' (its title whendisabled). When a text document is active in the front window,this command is enabled and will activate the Multi-File Searchwindow with the document's enclosing folder selected as thesearch location. (The name and path to the folder are displayedin the menu.)
- The 'Arrange' item on the Window menu nowpresents a submenu with all of the available arrangements.Choosing one will apply it; for any that you use frequently, youcan assign a keyboard shortcut in the application's 'Menus &Shortcuts' preferences.
- A new language module for EditorConfig files is now built in,with syntax coloring and section navigation (via the functionnavigation menu).
- The INI language module has been rewritten, and providesimproved navigation as well as folding.
Changes
- The application will no longer use the
TUTX
,utxt
, orUTF8
HFS file type codes as determinants of the text encodingused inside the document. - The single-purpose 'Subversion' action bar item has beenremoved from disk browser and project windows. Thecontextual-menu items remain.
- The 'Go To Line' panel has been rewritten; and you cannow enter a line number of the form '
xx:yy
', in which the 'yy
' isa character offset into the destination line. If the characteroffset exceeds the number of characters on the line, theinsertion point will be placed at the end of the line. - Changed the 'Include' options in the Create Table Shellsheet to read 'Add', to make their purpose clearer.
- The 'Go To Next Conflict/Go To Previous Conflict' commandsthat were on the Subversion and Perforce menus have beenconsolidated into a single pair of 'Previous Conflict' and 'NextConflict' on the Go menu, and will find conflict markers forSubversion, Perforce, and Git in the active document (all threesystems use the same conflict marker format).
- The 'Use symbol and text substitution' option has beenremoved from the Editing preferences as well as from thelanguage-specific settings panel, and the previous behavior(automaticaly inserting substitutions) has been consigned to thedustbin of history.
- 'Rename' in project windows is now retitled as 'Rename inProject', and the panel in which you enter the item's new namenow makes it clear that renaming it in the project does notaffect the item on disk. (It never did.)
- Subversion contextual-menu commands are now hidden when theselected item(s) are not part of a Subversion working copy.
- Made some changes to generation and management ofpreview temporary files (when using Markup -> Preview [in a webbrowser]):
- When possible, the temp file is given a name derived fromthe document's name, and created in the same directory as thedocument. This way you can preview multiple files from thesame directory without them stepping on each other. Kite compositor 1 9 7 64.
- If the document has not been saved to disk, it will becreated in a temporary-items location designated by the OS.
- It is now possible to preview non-HTML files in web browserswith the same results as live previews ('Preview in BBEdit').
- Saving or closing the document will delete the preview tempfile.
- When generating a table shell (Markup -> Tables -> Create TableShell), BBEdit will now generate
<thead>
and<tbody>
containers if 'Add table header' is turned on. - 'Move Lines Up', 'Move Lines Down', and 'Delete Lines' are nowenabled for multi-line selections, even when the selection doesnot end on a line break. (Whole lines are still moved or deleted.)
- Changed the way we launch Dash so that it can decidewhether it wants to be in the foreground, or not.
- The File -> New -> HTML Document dialog box has been modernized,mostly to work around OS cosmetic bugs.
- If a project is open which contains site settings, File -> New-> HTML document will take its initial values from those settings.
- Removed vestigial 'Change clipping set to matchdocument's language' from the Languages preferences.
- The fourth command on the Search menu is now always'Search in Project or Disk Browser' (its title when disabled). Itis only available when a project or disk browser is the activewindow, and when enabled displays either the project's name orthe root directory of the disk browser. Selecting this commandwill activate the Multi-File Search window with the appropriateitem selected as the search location.
- The previous 'Arrange' item on the Window menu has beenrenamed to 'Cascade Windows' to describe what it does. Themodified version to 'Tile Two Front Windows' remains available,on the Arrange submenu.
- In Differences windows, BBEdit now applies a heavy underline toany differing text ranges within the selected difference entry(using the active color scheme's 'Plain Text' color), whichshould be easier to read under a wider variety of circumstancesthan the previous highlighting.
Fixes
- Fixed a bug in which a memory error would occur whentrying to undo after backspacing over a printable characterimmediately adjacent to one or more combining (or otherzero-width) characters.
- Fixed crash which would occur in situations where the
Application Support/BBEdit/Setup
folder didn't exist andcouldn't be created. - Messed with the control flow in keyboard input so that keys thatwe don't explicitly handle will cause an error to be returned tothe OS, such that it redispatches they keyboard gesture asneeded. Among other things, this allows the Escape key to exitfull-screen mode; as long as you have turned off “Emulate Emacskey bindings” in BBEdit’s Keyboard preferences.
- Fixed crashes and other misbehaviors that would occur whenattempting to use the Setup window, but the permissions on your
Application Support/BBEdit/ folder
were so b0rked that the Setupfolder couldn't be created. - The 'Setup' command and other commands that route to it (e.g.'Manage Bookmarks', 'Manage Patterns', 'Manage File Filters') arenow disabled if the Setup folder is unusable (per the above).
- Removed the file filter for the Hex Dump file picker;previously you could hold down the Option key to enable any filetype, but nobody knew that.
- If a button in the Find or Multi-File Search window has nokeyboard equivalent, it will now show no tooltip (instead of anempty one).
- Fixed a bug in which the 'untitled N' count would be wrong afterrestoring application state which involved untitled documents.
- Fixed bug in which New -> Shell Worksheet would always make anew window for the worksheet document, rather than putting itinto the front document window if the preference so indicated.
- Fixed bug in which syntax coloring was disabled in Perforcecommit form windows.
- Fixed a bug in conversion of the old
.bbcolors
color schemeformat, which would lead to occasional incorrect color choiceswhen using those schemes after conversion. - Legacy color schemes (which don't contain settings for a greatmany of the new color types introduced in 11.0) are now updatedto include reasonable default settings for colors that theydidn't previously specify. The defaults are drawn from thefactory 'BBEdit Light' or 'BBEdit Dark' color scheme, dependingon whether the color scheme being converted is likewise light ordark.
- Fixed crash which would occur when attempting to quitthe application (usually via a system-wide Log Out, Restart, orShut Down command) while it was in the middle of restoringpreviously saved state.
- Fixed bug in which 'Find All Misspelled Words' wouldfail to do so.
- Fixed bug in which editing inside of a PHP heredocstring would result in it being colored incorrectly.
- Made a change to prevent the Pretty Print format optionfrom inserting line breaks before or after tags occurring withina
<pre>
..</pre>
tag pair. - Adjusted the default comment delimiters for Lasso.
- Fixed bug in which the wrong error was reported whentrying to apply a Unix filter whose
#!
line pointed tosomething that didn't exist. - Fixed bug in which
--resume
didn't work in thebbedit
andbbdiff
command-line tools. - Fixed crash which would occur when the HTMLsyntax checker attempted to validate a valueless attribute.
- Added a color setting for Perl POD sections. Thebuilt-in color schemes have been updated; if you are not usingone of those, then you will need to manually update your owncolor scheme with the new setting.
- Made an adjustment so that non-zero-width Unicode combiningcharacters are no longer drawn as invisibles.
- Fixed bug in which Xcode project enumeration would miss filescontained in internally generated project groups of a previouslyunobserved type.
- Fixed bug in which using the 'Hard Wrap' sheet wouldnot scroll the selection range into view after wrappingcompleted, which was a problem when wrapping with the insertionpoint at the end of a very long line.
- Fixed cosmetic in the Subversion 'choose a working copy' dialogboxes when no previous WC had been chosen.
- When interpreting image metadata, unprintablecharacters are now stripped out of the comment string, to avoidcases in which images with junk metadata caused generation of ajunk
alt
attribute in the markup panel. - Fixed bug in which SGML unparsed character data (
CDATA
)sections were colored using a distinct color for which nosetting was available. The default color forCDATA
sections isnow the same as the foreground text color, and may be changed viathe 'SGML unparsed character data (CDATA)' setting under'General' in the Text Colors preferences. The factory suppliedcolor schemes have been updated accordingly. - Markup tools batch operations (Check Syntax, CheckLinks, Update Placeholders, Update Images, and deployment) willnow skip over temporary files that have been generated forbrowser previews.
- Fixed bug in which the CSS 'Text' panel wouldinappropriately rewrite the value for the
text-align
property,astext-align
. - Fixed bug in CSS box-model markup which would causeincorrect generation when entering a value in the 'all sides'field.
- Tabs in search results text are now replaced withnonbreaking spaces when being displayed in the results list.
- Using
--
to end option parsing in the command-linetools now ends it for all options, not just options beginningwith a single hyphen. - Negative values for line number increments (inAdd/Remove Line Numbers) no longer become unsigned.
- Corrected error reporting when deleting a single itemfails in an FTP/SFTP browser window.
- The text factory options for directing the output ofProcess Duplicate Lines in a text factory to the clipboard or anew document are now correctly disabled.
- Fixed bug in which both function menus in a Differencesresults window would display the functions in the document whichhad keyboard focus.
- Fixed bug in which the HTML pretty printer would stripempty attribute values.
- Fixed bug in which comparing two documents for which aDifferences window was already open, but the comparison was in adifferent new/old order, would inappropriately bring that windowto the front instead of creating a new Differences window.
- Fixed bug in Grep search pattern coloring in whichcharacter escapes and metacharacter sequences were not coloredwhen used inside of character classes.
- Fixed bug in which the CSS 'Format' command woulddamage the contents of @rules which contained comments.
- Fixed a small bug in the Javascript language module.Auto-folding would get confused if you compared something withthe Function keyword using the operator.
- Added
rem
,vw
,vh
,vmin
,vmax
units (where applicable)to the CSS markup dialogs. - The 'file is open' test for filtering during multi-file searchand text factory operations is now deferred until later in thetesting process, which might help improve performance insituations where an extremely large number of documents is open.
- Made a change to further improve file filtering performance formulti-file search and Text Factory application, by ruling outimage files and 'audiovisual' content (sound files and movies)when 'Text Files Only' is turned on.
- Added
try
andexcept
to the Object Pascal keywordlists, and the function scanner now recognizes them for purposesof maintaining block structure. - Fixed bug in which modifications of Return or Enter would dothings in the 'Insert Clipping' panel other than insert clippings.
- Removed some obsolete items from the Expert Preferences help,and made a couple of layout fixes.
- Fixed bug in which the Current Function item in thenavigation bar didn't correctly update its width when switchingbetween documents.
- Fixed case errors and omissions for somesubsets of PHP predefined names.
- Worked around a bug in OS X 10.10 (
18930264
) which wouldcause historical backups to fail if theBBEdit Backups
folderwas a Finder alias to some other location. - Fixed a layout glitch in the sheet for customizing per-languageeditor settings.
- Added an empty string as
BBLMCommentLineDefault
forHTML and related languages, so that customizing any per-languagesettings no longer breaks Un/Comment of a single line. - Fixed bug in which using 'New Project…' to create a newproject over an existing one would report a -48 error.
- Adjusted the colors used for sub-line differencesresults to be derived from the actual highlight colors, ratherthan simply flipping the active and inactive colors.
- OS X 10.10.3 fixes the 'creeping file panel'problem (
18785168
), so our internal workaround forsame is limited to 10.10 through 10.10.2. - The Un/Comment command now special-cases Fortran, and willpreserve the column spacing at the beginning of the line whenadding or removing the comment character.
- Fixed bug in which the display in the Keyboards & Shortcutspreferences wouldn't correctly update when changing shortcuts insome situations.
- If you put a ridiculous value into the wrap limit field for theHard Wrap dialog, it will now be clipped to something elseridiculous rather than overflowing to a negative value.
- Live-flashing navigation with the arrow keys no longer causesthe Text Statistics status item to change during the livehighlighting of matching parentheses.
- Fixed bug in which dragging text into or within one of thefields of the Find or Multi-File Search windows would haveunintended results.
fin
BBEdit editing its own Wikipedia article | |
Developer(s) | Bare Bones Software |
---|---|
Initial release | April 12, 1992; 28 years ago |
Stable release | |
Written in | C (through Carbon API) |
Operating system | macOS |
Type | Text editor |
License | Proprietary |
Website | www.barebones.com/products/bbedit |
BBEdit is a proprietarytext editor made by Bare Bones Software, originally developed for MacintoshSystem Software 6, and currently supporting macOS.[2]
History[edit]
The first version of BBEdit was created as a 'bare bones' text editor to serve as a 'proof of concept'; the intention was to demonstrate the programming capabilities of an experimental version of Pascal for the Macintosh. The original prototypes of BBEdit used the TextEdit control available in versions of the classic Mac OS of the time. The TextEdit control could not load files larger than 32 KB. The Macintosh Pascal project was ultimately terminated, but the demonstration program was reworked to use the THINK Technologies 'PE' text editing engine used for THINK C, which was much faster and could read larger files. BBEdit was the first freestanding text editor to use the 'PE' editing engine, and is the only one still being developed.
BBEdit was available at no charge upon its initial release in 1992 but was commercialized in May 1993 with the release of version 2.5.[3] At the same time, Bare Bones Software also made a less-featured version of BBEdit 2.5 called BBEdit Lite available at no cost. BBEdit Lite lacked plugin support, scriptability, syntax coloring and other features then deemed as mainly for advanced users. Bare Bones Software discontinued BBEdit Lite at version 6.1 and replaced it with TextWrangler, which was available for a fee, although significantly less than BBEdit. In 2005, TextWrangler 2.0 was released as freeware and subsequent versions continued to be distributed as such[4] up until 2017, when it was sunsetted and incorporated into BBEdit.[5]
Throughout its history, BBEdit has supported many Apple technologies that failed to gain traction, including OpenDoc and PowerTalk. The failure of PowerTalk, and the desire of developers to have email integrated to their text editor, led to the development of Mailsmith, an email client that uses BBEdit's editor component. Formerly developed by Bare Bones as a commercial application, in 2009 Mailsmith was transferred to Stickshift Software LLC and would continue to be developed as a labor of love and released as freeware.[6]
In 1994, taking advantage of BBEdit's then-novel plugin support, third party developers started writing plug-ins to easily create and format HTML code. In fact, the developers at Bare Bones Software first learned of the existence of HTML through users inquiring about these plug-ins. Barebones later bought the rights to the plugin code from their author and included them as part of the standard BBEdit package. The tools were included as an optional palette in version 4, and were progressively more integrated, gaining their own menu in version 5.0.[7] In version 4.5, Bare Bones introduced BBEdit Table Builder as an additional tool for web designers and developers to visually design HTML tables, then the main technique for layout control on web pages.[8][9] Table Builder was removed in version 6.0, since enhancing it would involve replicating the features of existing visual HTML editors, and BBEdit was at this time bundled with Dreamweaver.[10] BBEdit's plugin support was removed in version 9.6, in favor of the expanded selection of scripting languages available on Mac OS X.
BBEdit was one of the first applications to be made available for Mac OS X, as a Carbon app. On macOS BBEdit takes advantage of the operating system's Unix underpinnings by integrating scripts written in Python, Perl, or other common Unix scripting languages, as well as adding features such as shell worksheets that provide a screen editor interface to command line functionality similar to MPW Worksheets and Emacs shell buffers.
BBEdit's creator code
R*ch
refers to Rich Siegel, one of Bare Bones Software's founders and the original author of BBEdit.Features[edit]
BBEdit is designed for use by software developers and web designers.[2] It has native support for many programming languages and custom modules can be created by users to support any language. BBEdit is not a word processor, meaning it does not have text formatting or page layout features.
The application contains multi-file text searching capabilities including support for Perl-compatible regular expressions. BBEdit allows previewing and built-in validation of HTML markup and also provides prototypes for most HTML constructs that can be entered into a dialog box. It also includes FTP and SFTP tools and integrates with code management systems. BBEdit shows differences between file versions and allows for the merging of changes. Support for version control, including Git, Perforce, and Subversion is built in.[2]
A number of applications and developer tools provide direct support for using BBEdit as a third-partysource-code editor.
BBEdit supports the Open Scripting Architecture and can be scripted and recorded using AppleScript and other languages, as well as having the ability to execute AppleScripts itself.[11]
Language support[edit]
BBEdit supports syntax highlighting for a wide variety of popular computer languages. As of version 10.1, these include: ANSI C, C++, CSS, Fortran 95, HTML, Java, JavaScript, JSP, Lasso, Object Pascal, Objective-C, Objective-C++, Perl, PHP, Python, Rez, Ruby, Setext, SQL (including Transact-SQL, PL/SQL, MySQL, and PostgreSQL), Tcl, TeX, UNIX shell scripts, XML, and YAML. BBEdit's SDK allows users to develop additional language modules.[12]
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Freeware versions[edit]
BBEdit Lite[edit]
BBEdit Lite was a freeware stripped-down version of BBEdit,[13][14] that ceased development in 2003. BBEdit Lite had many of the same features as BBEdit such as regular expressions, a plug-in architecture and the same text editing engine, but no programming and web-oriented tools such as syntax highlighting, command lineshell, HTML tools or FTP support. BBEdit Lite 6.1 comes in two forms: a Classic version for use under Mac OS 7.5.5 to Mac OS 9, and a Carbon version that runs under Mac OS X natively. Note: the Classic version does not run under the Classic environment.[15]
TextWrangler[edit]
Developer(s) | Bare Bones Software |
---|---|
Initial release | February 25, 2003; 17 years ago |
Stable release | 5.5.2 / September 20, 2016 |
Operating system | macOS |
Type | Text editor |
License | Proprietary |
Website | www.barebones.com/products/textwrangler/ |
In 2003, Bare Bones introduced the commercial text editor TextWrangler, an enhanced version of BBEdit Lite,[14][16] which ceased further development. Later TextWrangler 2.0 was made available free of charge.[17] In 2016, BBEdit 11.6 introduced a free mode that matched TextWrangler's feature set, and in 2017, Bare Bones sunsetted support and development for TextWrangler. [18]
A plain text editor like BBEdit, TextWrangler did not have a robust set of formatting and style options. It has features common to most programming text editors, such as syntax highlighting for various programming languages, a find and replace function with regular expression support, spell check, and data comparison. TextWrangler also included scripting support using AppleScript, Python, Perl, shell scripts, and BBEdit's native Text Factories. It supported text reformatting, and could read and save files in encodings including various Unicode encodings, ASCII, Latin-1 and Latin-9.
BBEdit 11.6 and up[edit]
In the Summer of 2016, with the release of BBEdit 11.6, Bare Bones Software introduced a free mode of BBEdit[19] that even after the expiration of the 30-day evaluation period of BBEdit's full features, would continue to offer both TextWrangler's features and some additional features beyond TextWrangler's.[20] In response to a user question, author Rich Siegel confirmed that TextWrangler would eventually be phased out, given that the free mode of BBEdit now incorporates all functions of TextWrangler.[21][22]
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References[edit]
- ^'Bare Bones Software | BBEdit Downloads'.
- ^ abcBare Bones Software (2008). 'Bare Bones Software - BBEdit 9'. Archived from the original on 20 September 2008. Retrieved 2008-09-20.
- ^'MacTech | The journal of Apple technology'. preserve.mactech.com. Retrieved 2019-08-09.
- ^'TextWrangler aims to set the standard for text editors'. Macworld. 2005-01-18. Retrieved 2019-08-09.
- ^'We've officially sunsetted TextWrangler and it's not compatible with High Sierra. Time to switch!'. Twitter. 2017-10-12. Retrieved 2019-08-09.
- ^'Free Mailsmith Is the BBEdit of Email Clients'.
- ^'Review of BBEdit 5.0'.
With BBEdit version 5.0, in a move sure to win applause from many long-time users, the HTML tools have been moved into their own Markup menu (the palette is still available as well).
- ^'BBEdit 4.5'.
Ironically, Bare Bones has added a visual HTML tool to BBEdit 4.5, known as the BBEdit Table Builder. The Table Builder is a separate application and as the name implies, it is used to construct HTML tables.
- ^'Bare Bones Software Company History'.
- ^'BBEdit 6.5 manual'(PDF). Archived from the original(PDF) on 2016-10-11. Retrieved 2016-06-10.
Starting with BBEdit 6.0, Table Builder is no longer included in the BBEdit package. After thorough consideration, we decided that in order to expand Table Builder’s capabilities sufficiently to meet the needs of a majority of our customers, it would be necessary to replicate much of the functionality presently provided by existing visual HTML editors.
- ^Bare Bones Software. 'BBEdit's Other Useful Features'. Archived from the original on 4 September 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-03.
- ^Bare Bones Software. 'BBEdit's Display Features'. Archived from the original on 19 August 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-03.
- ^MacTech July 1993 Newsbits, http://www.mactech.com/articles/mactech/Vol.09/09.07/Jul93Newsbits/index.html
- ^ abBare Bones Company History, http://www.barebones.com/company/history.html
- ^Gruber, J., Kindall, J., Borenstein, P., Jester, S.,Siegel, R., & Woolsey, P. (2001). BBEdit Lite 6.1 User Manual. Bedford, MA: Bare Bones Software, Inc.
- ^MacWorld, BBEdit, February 2003. http://www.macworld.com/article/9341/2003/02/bbedit.html
- ^Bare Bones TextWrangler FAQ http://www.barebones.com/support/textwrangler/faqs.html
- ^''Bare Bones Drops TextWrangler for BBEdit's 'Free Forever' Demo''.
- ^'TextWrangler'. Bare Bones Software. Archived from the original on 5 August 2016. Retrieved 26 August 2016.
- ^'BBEdit Comparison Chart'. Bare Bones Software. Archived from the original on 2016-08-26. Retrieved 26 August 2016.
- ^'Re: Why is TextWrangler still available/developed given the recent addition of free mode to BBEdit?'. Google Groups. 2 August 2016. Retrieved 26 August 2016.
- ^'TextWrangler to Be Retired as Bare Bones Software Focuses Development on BBEdit'. Retrieved 2017-07-28.
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External links[edit]
- BBEdit – official site
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=BBEdit&oldid=982718242'