KKEdit
Source code text editor
Why another text editor?
Simple, I didn't like any of the others they
were all too flat ( sorry wrong sketch! ), anyway having used
gedit for years it was getting increasingly difficult to keep
it compiling without loads of gnome dependencies, looking
around Linux text editors seem to be VERY simple (leafpad)
stupidly complex (GVim,Bluefish), trying to be all things to
all people.
One of the best text editors I have used is BBEdit but that is
only available on the mac, so I bit the bullet and decided to
write my own with the best bits from BBEdit ( the name KKEdit
is a tip of the hat to BBEdit ), gedit and leafpad. A simple
uncluttered interface, no major dependencies, with just the
features I use all the time, and TA DAH! KKEdit.
What it's not!
KKEdit is NOT a word processor or a web page
editor, it is NOT and IDE! It won't right code for you, it
wont insist on inserting brackets ( REALLY annoying! ), it
wont force you to use any particular style, it doesn't need
you to break all your fingers trying to hit weird and
wonderful key combo's and it is not tied to one particular
distro, oh yes and it won't cost you a penny!
What it is and does
KKEdit is a deceptively simple text editor with
syntax colouring.
It also has a function menu which allows you to jump instantly
to a function definition, a navigation menu which will look in
all open files for a function definition and then switch to
that tab and go to the relevant line if it can't find a
definition in any open files it will do a recursive search
from the folder of the currently selected document, you can
also highlight a #include directive and it will search for and
try to open the file, include files surrounded by <>
will be looked for in /usr/include, files surrounded by ""
will be looked for in the current folder.
External tools can be added either globally or locally and
when run can either replace the currently select text with
their output, replace all the files text, be run in a terminal
or you can choose to ignore the output form the script, BASH,
python and perl can be used for the script language or any
interpretor that uses '#' as a comment marker.
A number of simple demo scripts are included in the folder
"demotoools" ( good name eh ).
You can drag and drop a file onto the main toolbar/menu to
open a file.
Session can be saved and reloaded.
Any amount of bookmarks can be added anywhere, selecting a
bookmark from the menu will switch to that tab and move to the
appropriate line.
Just type a line number into the edit box on the toolbar to
jump straight to that line.
Manual
Navigation Menu
Functions Menu
Tools Menu
Preferences
Customize The Tool Bar
Other Features
Get It And Build It
Bug Reporting
Navigation Menu
The Navigation menu has five sub-menus - Go To
Definition, Open Include File, Go To Line, Search For Define and
Search In Gtk-Docs.
To go where a function etc is defined, select it and choose 'Go
To Definition' KKEdit will then look in open files for the
definition and switch to that page and highlight the appropriate
line like so:
As you can see as the definition was not in an
open file KKEdit looks for the definition recursively starting
from the folder where the file was opened from and if found
opening the file and selecting the line with the definition.
The search depth for finding a definition is set in the prefs
and defaults to 1 i.e. only looks for definitions in files in
the same folder as any open documents, be careful about setting
this too high as it can cause an unwanted delay when right
clicking if it has to look in a lot of sub-folders.
You can also open an include file just highlight the line and
select Open Include File like so:
Include files are looked for in either
/usr/include or the directory the current document is in,
depending whether the file name is surrounded by '<>' or '
"" '.
Search for Define will open an entry box and allow you to type
in a definition or part of a definition and will try to find it
in the usual places opening a file if necessary, the search is
case insensitive.
Functions Menu
The Functions menu contains a list of all defined
functions, variables and defines that are visible in this file,
to jump to the appropriate function definition just select it
from the menu like so:
The Functions menu will be updated after saving a
file or switching tabs.
You can select how the functions menu is displayed/sorted from
the preferences.
Tools Menu
The Tools menu allow you to run an external script
i.e. to open a terminal with the working directory set to the
folder where the current file is open:
External tools can either be added globally to
/usr/share/KKEdit/tools (if you have installed with
--prefix=/usr) or locally in ~/.KKEdit/tools.
External tools are passed four environment variables:
KKEDIT_CURRENTFILE - Path to current document.
KKEDIT_CURRENTDIR - Directory of current document.
KKEDIT_SELECTION - Currently selected text.
KKEDIT_DATADIR - Directory of global folder ( e.g.
/usr/share/KKEdit ).
KKEDIT_HTMLFILE-
Temporary file for displaying html in doc viewer
More variables may be defined later.
External tools are sorted by name in the
menu and edit tools dialog.
External tools can be created by hand or via the 'Tools->New'
menu like so:
The place holders are:
%t - Currently selected text, the same as the $KKEDIT_SELECTION
environment variable passed to the command .
%f - Filepath of the current document, the same as the
$KKEDIT_CURRENTFILE environment variable passed to the command.
%d - Directory of the current document or ${HOME}, the same as
the $KKEDIT_CURRENTDIR environment variable passed to the
command.
%i -The location of the globally installed tools, the same as
the $KKEDIT_DATADIR environment variable passed to the command .
%h - Temporary file for displaying html in doc viewer, the same
as the $KKEDIT_HTMLFILE environment variable passed to the
command .
Selecting 'View Output' will send the output of the tool to a
pane in at the bottom of the editor, you can alter the size by
dragging the handle and hide/show the pane from the 'View' menu,
only stdout is captured from the output of the tool if you want
to capture stderr you must redirect it to stdout, you can not
capture stdin, if you need to interact with the tool use the '
Run Tool In Terminal' option.
You can also optionally set a keyboard shortcut, just click in
the shortcut box, hold CONTROL and press another key with or
without SHIFT, to delete the shortcut just press the 'Delete'
key.
The output pane will be shown automatically for any tool that
has this option selected, like so:

This example uses the 'Run As Root Script' tool available in the
'Example External Tools' folder included with this archive.
IMPORTANT
When using a tool that runs a command as root and
a GUI root privileges program has NOT been set the tool is
automatically run in a terminal.
Selecting 'Show HTML Doc' will
display the file $KKEDIT_HTMLFILE in
either the Gtk Doc viewer or your default
browser, this is used in the installed
example tool 'Open Man Page' to display the manpage of
the selection ( if it exists and if
you have man2html installed, most
people do ).
Only tools that have "Show Tool In Pop-Up Menu"
selected will show up in the pop-up menu if you
have also selected some text.
Tools that have the "Always show
In Popup" selected will show in the popup menu
regardless of whether any text
is or is not selected.
Commands can be 'compound' commands i.e. 'cat
/tmp/textfile|head' but using pipes to a
terminal may not always give what you want i.e.
'xterm -hold -e 'cat "/tmp/textfile"|tail
-f'' WILL work and show the
tail of the file but WILL NOT
follow properly this is a feature/problem
of xterm and beyond my
control :(
For very complex
commands create a script and set 'command' to the file path of
your script, file paths can be absolute OR
relative ( see the example scripts ).
Tools can be edited by selecting from the drop down list, if you
attempt to edit a globally installed tool ( i.e.i.e.
one in /usr/share/KKEdit/tools ) you must have root privileges.
You can also display a progress bar from your tool by selecting
the 'Use Prgress Bar' checkbox, a bar will be created for you
and you can control it by writing simple commands to a file, the
file path is contained in the environment variable
'$KKEDIT_BAR_CONTROL", you can write either a simple number
between 0 and 100 to set the gauge , 'pulse' to pulse the bar
and 'quit' to kill the bar, you do not need to specifically
write the 'quit' command as it will be sent automatically when
your tool ends, N.B. if you set your tool to run asynchronously
then you must send the 'quit' command your self.
There is an example of how to control the bar in the example
tools in /usr/share/KKEdit/Example External Tools.
The title of the progress bar window is automatically set to the
name of your tool.
Preferences
The Prefs file is created ~/.KKEdit/kkedit.rc and
will be created/recreated when quitting KKEdit.
Preferences should be set from 'Edit->Preferences'
You can set the command to run an external tool in a terminal
from here.
Selecting 'Don't Open Duplicate File' will switch
to the tab of that file rather than opening another copy.
Selecting 'Don't Warn On File Change' will suppress the waning
dialog when an open file is changed on disk ( by another app
), the tab will still be updated.
The 'Run as Root Command' allows you to set your favorite
graphical root privileges program, if this is blank a terminal
will be used to ask for admin passwords ( See
here ), the 'Terminal command' will be used to open a
terminal, if this is blank then the default 'xterm -e' will be
used.
You can also set the highlight colour of bookmarked lines, and
also whether to show the bookmarkbar.
You can also customize the keyboard shortcuts from here, just
click the button and you will get a dialog popup like so:

To change the default shortcut click in the relevant box and
press a CONTROL key and your choice of keys with or without
SHIFT, shortcuts MUST use CONTROL.
Repeat the above untill you have set all the shortcuts you
want and click 'Apply' to keep the changes or 'Cancel' to
guess what?
You can also choose to open a file normally or by first
reading the link ( if it's a symlink ), this means that
filepath will either be the path to the link OR the path to
the real file, this is handy when using the 'Open' option from
the tab menu as you will either select files to open from the
folder the link is in or the folder were the real file is, try
it and see it's a lot less complicated than it sounds!
The 'Theme' can be set for the prefs via the drop down,
update of the current page is 'live', click 'Apply' to set the
theme globally or 'Cancel' to ignore changes.
Themes are stored in "/usr/share/gtksourceview-2.0/styles" (
default installed themes ) or locally in ~/.gnome2/gedit/styles,
for compatability with gedit as most gktsourceview themes seem
to be gedit-centric ;)

Customize The Tool Bar
You can customize what appears on the tool bar by simply
clicking on a button to add it to the menu like so:

And then drag it to where you want it to appear on the toolbar
like so:
To remove an item from the toolbar just hold 'CONTROL' and click
on item to be removed.

Some items can only be added once 'Save', 'Open' etc when they
have been added they will be greyed out and can't be added
again, removing them makes them available again, the separator
and the expander can be used multiple times.
You can also choose to hide/show the toolbar from the 'View'
menu.
Other Features
Copy filename from tab menu.
Copy filepath from tab menu.
Spell check document from tab menu.
Copy function define.
Go to function definition.
Toggle bookmark.
Single or multiple instance app.
Open as hexdump.
Find API definition in Gtk Doc's.
Other
Right clicking on a
tab allows copying of the document file name,
file path, spell check the document ,split/insplit the view, set
the source highlighting and quickly open other files in the same
directory as the current document ( handy for quickly opening
header files ).
The document
context menu also contains the 'Go To Definition' function
for convenience.
Selecting the definition will copy it to the clipboard.
If there is no valid definition selected the menu item will not
be shown.
The right click context menu:

Spell
checker dialog
Bookmarks
Any amount of bookmarks can be added, selecting
one will switch to that document and line.
Bookmarks are stored with the 'Save Session' and can be restored
with the 'Restore Session With Bookmarks' menu.
Bookmarks are now toggled so if you place the cursor on a line
with a bookmark it will add it if it's not already bookmarked or
remove the bookmark if it is, you can use the 'Toggle Bookmark'
menu from the main menu or the main context menu, you can also
just click in the bookmarks bar to toggle a mark on or off ( you
will see a little bookmark icon ).
You can also remove all bookmarks from all open documents by
selecting 'Remove All Bookmarks' from the menu.
You can open a file as a
hex dump ( this is NOT a hex editor though that may change later
) like so:
Look up Gtk API
You can look up an API declaration from any
installed gtk-doc's installed by selecting all or part of an API
name like so:
And then selecting 'Search In Gtk-Docs' form the
Navigation menu or from the right click pop-up menu like so:
And if you have built with the --enable-docviewer
option to configure ( the default ) you will get a window pop-up
with a list of possible links to the API you want, if there is
only one possible link you will go straight to that.
Click the Link:
Links can be clicked and followed in the Gtk doc
viewer, and functions etc can be copied and pasted into your
document.
If you
had selected all of the 'gtk_button_get_use_stock ' API
name you would have gone straight to the screen shown.
You can also manually enter a search term in the box and press
'enter' or click 'find'.
You can search within the displayed page by entering a search
term in the box and clicking 'Down' to search forward and 'Up'
to search back..
Other Features include:
Can be set to automatically save and restore a
session ( with or without bookmarks ) when starting and exiting.
You can manually save and restore sessions via the 'File' menu,
you can also restore a session with or without the saved
bookmarks ( bookmarks are saved automatically with the session
), if you change a file on disk without re-saving the session
you may find that some bookmarks are skewed.
You can run
KKEdit either as a single instance app or as a multiple instance
app , set via the prefs menu. Single instances are unique to
each workspace.
You can also open a new instance of KKEdit from
the file menu regardless of the prefs settings.
Using Root
You can also open a new instance of KKEdit
with admin privileges from the file menu, You can set a
GUI to gain root privileges in the prefs window, I
would recommend, GtkSu ( Available
here ), use
'gtksu --', ubuntu users may have to use
'gtksu -- sudo' to stop gtk3 complaining,
other options ( depending on your system and
what you have installed are: 'gksu --', 'sudo
-A' and so on,if no GUI to get root privileges
is installed a terminal will be used depending
on your preferences settings.
!!WARNING!!
Editing files with admin privileges can
seriously damage your system if used incorrectly.
Find/Replace
Search and replace
uses regex expressions, the quick
search on
the toolbar
does not, the text
in the
find/replace boxes
are taken as
literal strings.
Escaped characters (
\n, \t etc ) are
translated to their
'real' equivalents
ie \t -> 0x9. To
search for the
string '\n' you
should use
'\\n'.
The regex
used by KKEdit uses
extended regex but
does NOT use the
perl '\s' to
represent space, to
include a space in
your search string
use '[ ]' for
single space '[ ]+'
to match one or more
spaces etc and
'[[:space:]]' to
match any whitespace
( including NL ).
You
can find and
replace in a
single file or in
all open files, if
you choose to do
a 'Replace
All'
in all open
files you will
be asked to
confirm the
action.
The
'Wrap'
option to
find/replace
is ignored
when searching
in all open
files.
You
can jump to a line using the toolbar entry:
You can do a 'live' search by just typing into the
toobar search box::
Split view mode:
The current source syntax colouring is now selectable via the 'tab'
context menu like so:
Be aware that the default highlighting for a
file is set by the mime-type system and so
may change after saving/loading. mime-types for a file can not usually be set manually but
depends on system auto magic stuff,
file suffix etc.

You can also turn on/off various bits and peices from the 'View'
menu:

Code Completion
If you have turned on 'Auto Show Completion' in the prefs then
as you type you will be shown various code completion options
like so:

The amount of letters in word before the pop up appears is set
in the prefs.
You can also force the completion dialog to pop up by using a
keyboard shortcut ( set via the prefs ) like so:

As you can see in the above you can add a list of custom words
to add to the completion dialog by simpley creating the file
~/.KKEdit/customcompletions and adding words to it, the file
MUST end in a newline, if the file does not exist no 'Custom
Words' option will be shown.
Function and variable completions will show the definition when
the 'Details' button is toggled on, custom and document words
have no extra details.
Create Documentation with Doxygen
You can create documentation for your code if you
have doxygen installed by selecting "Create Documentation" from
the 'File' menu, the documentation will be created in the
current folder and displayed with either the built in docviewer
or the system browser, the first time you run this there may be
a small delay while the initial files are created by doxygen,
after that selecting "Create Documentation" again just updates
the files, if there is not a file a called 'Doxyfile' in the
current folder a default config file is created for you, this
file can manually edited to suit your needs, I would recommend
that you also install Graphviz for the nice fancy flow charts,
most distros will have packages for these two apps.
If doxygen is NOT installed you won't have a "Create
Documentation" menu, just install it and ( optionally ) Graphviz
and restart KKEdit and the menu will appear.
Document Integration
There is some integration with the documents
crated by doxygen when, and only when using the built in
docview, select 'Documentation' form the 'File' menu and the doc
viewer will appear as above, there may be a bit of a delay the
first time you use this function while doxygen creates all the
necessary files, subsequent uses will be much faster as doxygen
will just update the needed files.
Click on the 'Files' tab to get a list of files, then SHIFT
click on a file name like so:
The doc viewer will open the page and the editor
will also either open the file or switch to the appropriate tab
like so:
Select a function for instance:
Shows this:
From here you can SHIFT click on the line number (
RED ) to open the file/switch tab and goto the line in the
editor and the docs like so:
Shift clicking the file name ( BLUE ) will open
the file or switch tabs as above.
Clicking a reference ( GREEN ) will go to the documentaion for
that refence where you can again select a line number/file etc.
You can also click on the various graph box's to go to a
function definition.
You can open a file by SHIFT clicking on a box in the include
dependency graph for a file like so:

This will open the file or switch to the relevant tab as above.
You can tweak the default doxyfile to add more/less info to the
browser.
The main change you will want to make to the file 'Doxyfile' is
to change the project name so open then file 'doxyfile' which
will be in the same folder as your source code and change
the line "PROJECT_NAME="My Project"" to somthing more
appropriate.
At the moment the documentation MUST be left in the html
folder created in the folder with your source code, this will
probably cjange later to allow you to set the folder for the
documentation.
If you want more information on the various options available in
the doxyfile run 'doxygen -g' from the command line and a
default Doxyfile will be created which is heavily commented.
Plugins
KKedit now supports simple 'c' plugins, an example plugin is
available on the plugins page, this will add a menu item to the
'Help' menu which will display all the currently supported
features of the plugin system this is still a work in progress
so bugs and suggestions are welcome, I will be adding extra
plugins that will be available from this site but if you write a
plugin or just have an idea for one please let me know.
Plugins can be enabled/disabled from the 'Plugin Prefs' menu
from the 'Edit' menu.
There are two plugin folders that will be searched for plugins:
/usr/share/KKEdit/plugins and ~/.KKEdit/plugins, plugins can be
in subfolders and should be named like 'libPLUGNAME.so'
See the installed example plugin for basic features and a basic
Makefile.
Full details and extra plugins
can be found here:
Get it here!
KKEdit
Dependencies
A reasonably new Xorg and desktop.
gtk-2.24.13.
gtksourceview-2.11.1.
ctags.
Autotools.
libunique-1.1.6
wget or curl.
webkitgtk-1.10.x. (optional but recommended)
aspell-0.60.6.1.
(optional but
recommended)
GtkSu (optional but recommended)
Manpage Editor (optional
but recommended)
Glib-Networking (optional
but
recommended)
webkit
is is an optional dependency if you want to build the Gtk-Doc
viewer disable by adding --disable-docviewer to ./configure or
./autogen.sh.
Spell checking via aspell is optional and can
be enabled with the '--enable-aspell' switch to ./configure or
./autogen.sh.
The presence of "GtkSu" and "Manpage
Editor" are detected at configure and if installed will be
used, in the case of GtkSu this is used to get admin privileges when opening a root editor from the
file menu, if Manpage Editor is detected a
menu item is added to the file menu, both can be
downloaded from this website.
Glib-Networking is a runtime dependency and is used to do a
google search if "Open Man page"
or "Search in GTK-Docs" can't
find anything.
If you use a source based distro like LFS or Slackware
you should have all(most) of these installed, if you use a
pre-packaged distro like debian and you have not compiled from
source before you may have to install some development packages
i.e.i.e. for debian ( this is from memory
) the build-essential package and the -dev packages for gtk2 and
gtksourceview, check your distros documentation and you distros
forums for general help on compiling software.
Building
Unpack the tar ball,cd into the KKEdit folder and
run:
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr --enable-aspell
--enable-docviewer
make
sudo make install
( ./configure can now be used instead of
./autogen.sh - no need for autotools ).
PLEASE read the README file!
See the 'INSTALL' file for full details.
Reporting Bugs
Please send bug reports, feature suggestions, large bags of
jewels etc to:
kdhedger68713@gmail.com
I will get back to you as soon as I can.
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