![]() ![]() However, Koder is not yet Retina optimized and so the text is like ouch on my eyes.ĭisclaimer: Textastic has previously been a sponsor of the RSS feed. I downloaded this app as well and it’s document workflow is much more akin to Coda’s. There was another app which people ( Ben Brooks in particular) recommended, and that is Koder. 2 likes Reply Ian bradbury Mar 25 '20 +1 to Textastic - I've found Textastic to be a good editor. Working Copy was the best Git client and it works well with Textastic. It has an option to use Inconsolata, which I love it has great syntax highlighting and it was just updated for the Retina screen. As far as the editor goes, Textastic is the best IDE I've used (for iPhone & iPad), but my workflow was still considerably slower than on a Macbook or iMac. However, Textastic’s approach seems to make more sense for an iPad editor because it’s easier to make syntax mistakes and you generally code a bit slower on an iPad (especially if you’re using the on-screen keyboard). In Coda, you’re basically working with the live file, and when you save it, you’re saving it to the server. With Textastic you pick a file or folder on your server you want to work with, download it to your iPad, work with the local copy, feel free to save it, and if/when you’re ready to upload it you chose to upload. Textastic is an advanced code editor for iPhone with support for syntax highlighting, remote file transfer, and SSH. Its feature set is very similar to Textastic as well. Like Textastic, Koder has been around for over a decade. ![]() Textastic is probably the most popular code editor for iOS, and for good reasons. It has tons of customisation and scripting capabilities. Using native iPad apps for writing code Textastic. Unfortunately, there isn’t an official iPad app just yet, but that doesn’t mean you can’t use VS Code on your iPad. It supports multitasking technology on iPad perfectly. It’s made by Microsoft and is available for macOS, Windows, and Linux. It has a solid file manager, with Files app integration. The document workflow is a bit different than what I’m used to with Coda. Although there is one competitor on iPadOS with offline typesetting capabilities, namely Texpad, TeX Writer excels in almost every way. Textastic can read files from the local file storage and your iCloud storage. After installing Textastic, we will want to create a bookmark from Textastic to your Obsidian vault. The program costs 9.99 but is well worth it. I wouldn’t code a new site by hand from my iPad alone, but for a current project I’m in the middle of there are times when I can jump into Textastic and make small edits on the fly. First, install Textastic from the App Store. I have been using Textastic for the past several days and am getting comfortable with the idea of making small changes and edits to my site files if need be. A few days ago I asked on Twitter what FTP-capable Text Editor I should get for the iPad. ![]()
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