Rich text editor for linux
I need a rich text editor for Linux for note-taking. I'm aware there is this question from 2009: What is the simplest RTF editor in linux? The top answer recommends Abiword. I tried Abiword, but I found it glitchy, and the project does not seem to be very active any more. I also tried LibreOffice writer, but it somehow lost half of my file when saving as .rtf, so I am not touching that any more. Is there any good rich text editor for Linux in this day and age?
Edit: this was tagged a "possible duplicate" of the question I linked. I repeat that the 6-year-old question did not help me, so I am asking again to get a more recent answer. In my opinion 6 years is enough time to ask again in case new software has come up.
linux text-editors rtf
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I need a rich text editor for Linux for note-taking. I'm aware there is this question from 2009: What is the simplest RTF editor in linux? The top answer recommends Abiword. I tried Abiword, but I found it glitchy, and the project does not seem to be very active any more. I also tried LibreOffice writer, but it somehow lost half of my file when saving as .rtf, so I am not touching that any more. Is there any good rich text editor for Linux in this day and age?
Edit: this was tagged a "possible duplicate" of the question I linked. I repeat that the 6-year-old question did not help me, so I am asking again to get a more recent answer. In my opinion 6 years is enough time to ask again in case new software has come up.
linux text-editors rtf
2
Possible duplicate of What is the simplest RTF editor in linux?
– duDE
Feb 25 '16 at 13:33
you can install wordpad or notepad using wine. You can also install open office.
– Jay T.
Feb 25 '16 at 13:55
I agree one is entitled to ask again the same question, 6 years later. It is not obvious that the answer, at least in this specific case, should be the same.
– MariusMatutiae
Feb 25 '16 at 14:33
there are a lot of options available, you can choose one of these: howtogeek.com/112385/…
– Jay T.
Feb 25 '16 at 14:39
Thank you, but the only editor that supports rich text editing and runs on Linux natively on that page seems to be Abiword, which I did not like for the reasons mentioned in my original post.
– jnalanko
Feb 25 '16 at 15:55
|
show 1 more comment
I need a rich text editor for Linux for note-taking. I'm aware there is this question from 2009: What is the simplest RTF editor in linux? The top answer recommends Abiword. I tried Abiword, but I found it glitchy, and the project does not seem to be very active any more. I also tried LibreOffice writer, but it somehow lost half of my file when saving as .rtf, so I am not touching that any more. Is there any good rich text editor for Linux in this day and age?
Edit: this was tagged a "possible duplicate" of the question I linked. I repeat that the 6-year-old question did not help me, so I am asking again to get a more recent answer. In my opinion 6 years is enough time to ask again in case new software has come up.
linux text-editors rtf
I need a rich text editor for Linux for note-taking. I'm aware there is this question from 2009: What is the simplest RTF editor in linux? The top answer recommends Abiword. I tried Abiword, but I found it glitchy, and the project does not seem to be very active any more. I also tried LibreOffice writer, but it somehow lost half of my file when saving as .rtf, so I am not touching that any more. Is there any good rich text editor for Linux in this day and age?
Edit: this was tagged a "possible duplicate" of the question I linked. I repeat that the 6-year-old question did not help me, so I am asking again to get a more recent answer. In my opinion 6 years is enough time to ask again in case new software has come up.
linux text-editors rtf
linux text-editors rtf
edited Mar 20 '17 at 10:04
Community♦
1
1
asked Feb 25 '16 at 13:15
jnalankojnalanko
1013
1013
2
Possible duplicate of What is the simplest RTF editor in linux?
– duDE
Feb 25 '16 at 13:33
you can install wordpad or notepad using wine. You can also install open office.
– Jay T.
Feb 25 '16 at 13:55
I agree one is entitled to ask again the same question, 6 years later. It is not obvious that the answer, at least in this specific case, should be the same.
– MariusMatutiae
Feb 25 '16 at 14:33
there are a lot of options available, you can choose one of these: howtogeek.com/112385/…
– Jay T.
Feb 25 '16 at 14:39
Thank you, but the only editor that supports rich text editing and runs on Linux natively on that page seems to be Abiword, which I did not like for the reasons mentioned in my original post.
– jnalanko
Feb 25 '16 at 15:55
|
show 1 more comment
2
Possible duplicate of What is the simplest RTF editor in linux?
– duDE
Feb 25 '16 at 13:33
you can install wordpad or notepad using wine. You can also install open office.
– Jay T.
Feb 25 '16 at 13:55
I agree one is entitled to ask again the same question, 6 years later. It is not obvious that the answer, at least in this specific case, should be the same.
– MariusMatutiae
Feb 25 '16 at 14:33
there are a lot of options available, you can choose one of these: howtogeek.com/112385/…
– Jay T.
Feb 25 '16 at 14:39
Thank you, but the only editor that supports rich text editing and runs on Linux natively on that page seems to be Abiword, which I did not like for the reasons mentioned in my original post.
– jnalanko
Feb 25 '16 at 15:55
2
2
Possible duplicate of What is the simplest RTF editor in linux?
– duDE
Feb 25 '16 at 13:33
Possible duplicate of What is the simplest RTF editor in linux?
– duDE
Feb 25 '16 at 13:33
you can install wordpad or notepad using wine. You can also install open office.
– Jay T.
Feb 25 '16 at 13:55
you can install wordpad or notepad using wine. You can also install open office.
– Jay T.
Feb 25 '16 at 13:55
I agree one is entitled to ask again the same question, 6 years later. It is not obvious that the answer, at least in this specific case, should be the same.
– MariusMatutiae
Feb 25 '16 at 14:33
I agree one is entitled to ask again the same question, 6 years later. It is not obvious that the answer, at least in this specific case, should be the same.
– MariusMatutiae
Feb 25 '16 at 14:33
there are a lot of options available, you can choose one of these: howtogeek.com/112385/…
– Jay T.
Feb 25 '16 at 14:39
there are a lot of options available, you can choose one of these: howtogeek.com/112385/…
– Jay T.
Feb 25 '16 at 14:39
Thank you, but the only editor that supports rich text editing and runs on Linux natively on that page seems to be Abiword, which I did not like for the reasons mentioned in my original post.
– jnalanko
Feb 25 '16 at 15:55
Thank you, but the only editor that supports rich text editing and runs on Linux natively on that page seems to be Abiword, which I did not like for the reasons mentioned in my original post.
– jnalanko
Feb 25 '16 at 15:55
|
show 1 more comment
1 Answer
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ted perhaps,
https://nllgg.nl/Ted/
it is designed mainly for editing RTF documents not other formats, and seems quite robust
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active
oldest
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ted perhaps,
https://nllgg.nl/Ted/
it is designed mainly for editing RTF documents not other formats, and seems quite robust
add a comment |
ted perhaps,
https://nllgg.nl/Ted/
it is designed mainly for editing RTF documents not other formats, and seems quite robust
add a comment |
ted perhaps,
https://nllgg.nl/Ted/
it is designed mainly for editing RTF documents not other formats, and seems quite robust
ted perhaps,
https://nllgg.nl/Ted/
it is designed mainly for editing RTF documents not other formats, and seems quite robust
answered Feb 3 at 4:57
Svetlana T.Svetlana T.
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2
Possible duplicate of What is the simplest RTF editor in linux?
– duDE
Feb 25 '16 at 13:33
you can install wordpad or notepad using wine. You can also install open office.
– Jay T.
Feb 25 '16 at 13:55
I agree one is entitled to ask again the same question, 6 years later. It is not obvious that the answer, at least in this specific case, should be the same.
– MariusMatutiae
Feb 25 '16 at 14:33
there are a lot of options available, you can choose one of these: howtogeek.com/112385/…
– Jay T.
Feb 25 '16 at 14:39
Thank you, but the only editor that supports rich text editing and runs on Linux natively on that page seems to be Abiword, which I did not like for the reasons mentioned in my original post.
– jnalanko
Feb 25 '16 at 15:55