Text Editor For R

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Rich-text editors, also known as online rich-text editors, are web components that allow users to edit and enter text within a web browser. Rich-text editors are used in numerous ways such as in enhancing your comment input form or as part of a web application that allows entry of user-generated and formatted content. Rich-text editors are essentially web-based WYSIWYG (“what you see is what you get”) editors.

  • As far as the connection to R goes, I tried unsuccessfully some time back to write a general purpose function that would connect any editor that could send a block of text back to R and have it evaluated.
  • Every year, many new Code Editors are launched, and the developer finds it challenging to choose one. Following is a curated list of Top 15 source code and text editor software for Windows and Mac platforms. All the editors in the list are Free to use. The code editor could be standalone or integrated into an IDE.

There are many rich-text editors out there. What’s even better than a lot of choices? Many of the best rich-text editors currently in the market are free.

In this article, we present 20 exceptional (and free) rich-text editors.

1. TinyMCE

TinyMCE is an open source (under the GNU Lesser General Public License) rich-text editor released and maintained by Moxiecode. As indicated by the name, TinyMCE is lightweight but highly customizable through an intuitive API. TinyMCE’s plugin system allows you to download themes and plugins to extend the core installation.

Text Editor For R

TinyMCE |Demo | Download

2. FCK Editor

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FCKeditor is another wildly popular open source online rich-text editor (check out some of the websites that use it). It has a “Word clean-up” feature that automatically detects and cleans up text that’s copied from Microsoft Word documents. It has one of the best HTML table editing and creation features, making it very easy for users to create and edit tables for displaying data.

FCKeditor | Demo | Download

3. NicEdit

Text Editor For R

NicEdit is lightweight, no-fuss cross-platform rich-text editor that emphasizes user-friendliness and simplicity over barraging users with too many features. You can serve NicEdit remotely from the NicEdit website; all you have to do is copy a JavaScript code snipplet and voila – it just works (as well as saving your server some system resources).

NicEdit | Demo | Download

4. BXE

BXE is an XML-based WYSIWYG editor that allows you to change an entire web page. It has been an open source application since 2002 – and with a devout following – you might be able to quickly find some help if you run into any issues in the BXE IRC channel.

BXE | Demo | Download

5. MarkItUp!

markItUp! is a JavaScript-based markup editor built on top of the jQuery library. With markItUp!, you can easily turn any HTML textarea into a fully-featured WYSIWYG editor. It’s lightweight (the script weighs in at only 6.5kb), supports keyboard shortcuts, has a built-in Ajax live preview and many more features that make markItUp! an excellent choice.

markItUp! | Demo | Download

6. WidgEditor

The widgEditor is an open source project of Cameron Adams released under the GNU General Public License. It’s a simple and no-fuss HTML rich-text editing solution that converts regular HTML textareas into a WYSIWYG. Because it’s JavaScript-based and designed to degrade gracefully, users with JavaScript turned off will still be able to use the HTML textarea.

widgEditor | Demo | Download

7. EditArea

EditArea is a free JavaScript source code editor. It’s an excellent solution for weblogs and websites that allow developers to contribute and format their own code.

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EditArea | Demo | Download

8. Cross Browser Rich Text Editor (RTE)

Cross-Browser Rich Text Editor (“RTE” for short) is a free rich-text editor released under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 license. It’s a work based on the designMode functionality introduced in Internet Explorer 5 and implemented in the Mozilla Rich Text Editing API. It just has basic features, so it’s perfect for individuals looking to add simple rich-text editing support.

Cross-Browser Rich Text Editor (RTE) | Demo

9. YUI Library Rich Text Editor

The YUI Library Rich Text Editor is a UI control that’s part of the YUI Library. It’s a great solution for those already using YUI and individuals that want to save some server resources (since you can serve it directly from the Yahoo! servers). The YUI Library Rich Text Editor also has excellent mobile device support, making it a great web-accessible rich-text editing solution.

Yahoo! UI Library: Rich Text Editor | Demo | Download

10. FreeTextBox

Web professionals using the .NET framework that want to add editing capabilities to their web pages and web applications should check out FreeTextBox: a robust, fully-featured, and extremely popular rich-text editor for ASP.NET. It has a built-in image gallery, a helpful JavaScript API for customization, and a full list of editing controls for constructing tables, ordered/unordered lists, and even spellchecking (using the IE spellchecking engine).

Text Editor For R

FreeTextBox | Demo | Download

11. Damn Small Rich Text Editor

Damn Small Rich Text Editor (DSRTE) is a lightweight, free rich-text editor built on top of the jQuery library and a PHP backend. It’s plugin-enabled (meaning it’s highly-extensible), has image-uploading capabilities (using Ajax for responsive user interaction), and an HTML cleanup feature to tidy up messy markup.

Damn Small Rich Text Editor | Download

12. Silverlight Rich Text Editor

Silverlight rich text editor is the first rich-text editor for Silverlight. It has many useful features such as “find and replace” to quickly find specific text or to batch-replace them with something else, keyboard shortcuts support, serialization of text input for security, and much more. Note that the original creator has stopped further development (so cross your fingers someone picks up his project).

Silverlight rich text editor | Demo | Download

13. Free Rich Text Editor

Free Rich Text Editor is a free, JavaScript-based HTML rich-text editing solution released under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Generic license. The interface is reminiscent of Microsoft Word 2003’s interface, so users of this desktop application will find it quite familiar. It has everything you’d expect from a robust rich-text editor, as well as a code view to preview and edit the HTML source code directly.

Free Rich Text Editor | Demo | Download

14. Dijit.Editor

The Dijit.Editor is Dijit‘s (Dojo‘s widget library) fully-featured rich-text editor. Built on top of The Dojo Toolkit (a popular JavaScript library/framework); it’s an excellent solution for those already using the Dojo Toolkit.

15. WYMeditor

WYMeditor is a web-based HTML editor that emphasizes the use of standards-compliant markup. It was developed to output compliant HTML 4.01 Strict Doctype HTML, so it’s the perfect solution for the standards-aware developer.

WYMeditor | Demo | Download

16. Whizzywig

Whizzywig is a free JavaScript web-based rich-text editor. Aside from features you’d expect from a rich-text editor, Whizzywig also has a Spanish and German version, a web-safe color picker to change your text’s colors, and custom-designed UI controls.

Whizzywig | Demo

17. openWYSIWYG

openWYSIWYG is a free and feature-packed web-based content editor that’s perfect for a host of content management systems. It has a very intuitive “table creation” feature to help users construct HTML tables. It also has a wide range of browser support including IE 5.5+ (Windows), Firefox 1.0+, Mozilla 1.3+ and Netscape 7+.

openWYSIWYG | Demo | Download

18. XStandard

XStandard is a highly-standards-compliant rich-text editor. It comes in two versions: XStandard Lite – which is completely free, and XStandard Pro. XStandard Lite has Microsoft Word text cleanup, spellchecking, and the ability to interact with third-party applications.

XStandard | Download

19. Xinha

Xinha is an open source, community-built rich-text editor released under a BSD style license. It’s highly-configurable, extensible, and feature-packed. Xinha emphasizes on community development, and as such, you’ll find many helpful contributors in the Xinha forums.

Xinha | Demo | Download

20. Kupu

Kupu is an open source “document-centered” client-side rich-text editor released by the international association for Open Source Content Management (OSCOM). It features easy integration into a variety of content management systems including Silva and Plone, easy customization and extension, and Ajax saving for an uninterrupted user experience.

Kupu | Demo | Download

What’s your favorite? Do you currently use any of these rich-text editors? Do you use one that isn’t on the list? Share your experiences and thoughts in the comments.

Written exclusively for WDD by Jacob Gube. He is a Web developer/designer and author of Six Revisions, a blog on Web development and design. If you want to connect with the author, you can follow him on Twitter.

Although some users would prefer a graphical user interface for R, the arguably best way to work with R is through the command line. This can be done directly in the R console, but often it is more convenient to write scripts in a separate file, instead of typing them directly in the console. This requires a text editor, and you can of course use the default one that comes with your OS. However, there are text editors that offer different levels of integration with R. Below are the ones I tried.

Before switching to Linux my preferred text editor was Tinn-R, an easy to use text editor that integrates nicely with R. I highly recommend it when using R in Windows. Other options are to use one of the GUI for R, which often offer an integrated text editor too.

After switching to Linux, I started out with Gedit which comes as default in Ubuntu. It includes syntax highlighting for R, but it misses an important features; a better integration with the terminal. Update: There is the plugin RGedit allowing it to interface with R and to become, thus, a simple and light-weight IDE for it. See also this post.

A text editor which does have both features is Kate, the default text editor of KDE (you’ll need to install Konsole too). You can send selected code directly to the terminal through the Tools menu -> Pipe to Terminal. However, to make most use of this feature, you should assign a shortcut, which can be done in the Settings -> Configure Shortcuts. Highlighted text can be exported as html through the menu File -> Export as HTML.

Update: Another editor you might want to try out is Jedit. It is a versatile programmer’s text editor with an integrated terminal, so you can run R from within the text editor. It’s written in Java and therefore cross-platform.

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An even better integration is offered by RKward. It includes a console similar to the R text console, and a script editor, both which offer syntax highlighting and auto completion of R symbols and functions. Like in Kate, highlighted text can be exported as HTML. There is also an object browser; very convenient when working with many objects and functions, an easy way to manage and install libraries (packages) and a built-in data frame editor. As added bonus, it includes a menu which provide access to some functionality in R. They do so by generating R syntax from settings made in a graphical dialog, which can be of great help for users less familiar with the R syntax. It is available for Linux and Windows, although for the latter it is still much a work in progress.

Edit: you should definitely check out Rstudio, a very user friendly R interface, somewhat similar to RKward, but easier to work with and it runs both on Windows and Linux. Another option I should add is JGR. Like Rstudio, it offers a graphical interface that integrates a text editor and the command line console.

I might try out other options in the future, like Emacs with ESS (“Emacs Speaks Statistics”). For now however I am using RKward (while occasionally using Kate) RStudio almost exclusively.