Zed on Linux is here!To install Zed on most Linux distributions, run the shell script below.
What do you say when someone asks you: "where's your cursor?" Probably something like "line 18", or if you're feeling good that day and it's a single digit you might add the column too: "line 18, column 5." Lines and columns — simple, easy. Text editors, Zed included, also use lines and columns to describe positions, but — to my surprise when I first explored Zed's codebase — there's quite a few o
Usually when I tell people that I've switched to Zed as my main editor, after something like 15 years of using Vim, the first question they ask is: don't you miss Vim? Then I tell them: Zed has a Vim mode. I don't think I would've or could've switched if it didn't. Then, surprisingly often, there are follow-up question that sound something like this: a Vim mode? Did you know that Neovim is embedda
Have you ever wanted to execute code from inside Zed? Run tests, or a linter, or the compiler, or maybe a script, or a shell one-liner? Watch: What you just saw was me using Zed Tasks to execute a Go test from inside Zed, passing the name of the current function to the go test command. Tasks, as a new feature, first landed in Zed all the way back in February, in v0.124.7. But since then they've be
Screenshot of Zed — but where are the red/yellow/green window controls? Does anything stick out? Yes, exactly, it's a screenshot of Zed running on Linux! Wait, what? Zed on Linux? Is it released yet? No, it's not, but it's taking shape, fast. At the end of January we open-sourced Zed and had zero Linux support. Now, three months later, you can compile & run Zed on Linux and actually use it. And I
For this second post in Zed Decoded, our blog & video series in which we're taking a closer look at how Zed is built, I've talked to Zed's three co-founders — Nathan, Max, Antonio — about the data structure at the heart of Zed: the rope. Companion Video: Rope & SumTree This post comes with a 1hr companion video, in which Thorsten, Nathan, Antonio, and Max use Zed to look at how Zed uses the Rope a
Welcome to the first article in a new series called Zed Decoded. In Zed Decoded I'm going to take a close look at Zed — how it's built, which data structures it uses, which technologies and techniques, what features it has, which bugs we ran into. The best part? I won't do this alone, but get to interview and ask my colleagues here at Zed about everything I want to know. Companion Video: Async Rus
One of the challenges we initially faced building Zed's user interface was Rust's strict ownership system. In Rust, every object has a single unique owner, which strongly encourages all data to be organized as a tree without cyclic references or shared ownership. Prior to building Zed, most of my experience writing GUI code was with web technology, where the JavaScript garbage collector means you
We're excited to announce that Zed is now an open source project. The code for Zed itself is available under a copyleft license to ensure any improvements will benefit the entire community (GPL for the editor, AGPL for server-side components). GPUI, the UI framework that powers Zed, is distributed under the Apache 2 license, so that you can use it to build high-performance desktop applications and
For more than a year, Zed's remote team has been coding together in Zed. Instead of reviewing diffs, we usually prefer to have conversations about code. Efficient dialog about any line in the codebase has become an important capability for our team. So important, in fact, that we really want to scale it. We've decided to build a platform designed for open-sourcing itself. Let me say that another w
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