Xml Editor For Mac For Free

  • Forget XML copy I have used it earlier and it does not provide long path names. When it comes to copying loads of file you need that feature. After searching a lot I found that GS RichCopy 360 provides that. It is simple to use and it uses multi threading file transfer to speed up the process. I would recommend it to you all.

  • This is good xml editor with validation. Some gui settings are difficult to find. Nevertheless, the main task of the app is done perfectly.

  • Good software

  • Did not verify all the details on the editor but I had a hard time finding how to change some settings. Some are in the options dailog soma (like the font size) are not. Also I could not change the color coding. As I want to use the tool for documenting I need to copy not only the text but also the formatting. The indentation is set to 1 space where the common is 4. This cannot be changed and makes the readability of the XML very hard. It could be a good tool but I gave it 3 stars for the not so user friendly interface.

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  1. Komodo Edit is hands down the best free XML editor available. It includes a lot of great features for HTML and CSS development. It includes a lot of great features for HTML and CSS development. Plus, if that isn't enough, you can get extensions for it to add on languages or other helpful features (like special characters ).
  2. Free xml editor free download - oXygen XML Editor, CAM XML Editor, Exchanger XML Editor, and many more programs.
Active5 years, 8 months ago

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12073/what-is-the-best-xml-editor was a great question regarding XML editors on Windows. What about on OS X?

Oxygen is feature complete, but, it's a Java app and a bit clunky on OSX. It's also extremely expensive.

Anything Mac native and comparable in features for less than $300 ?

Thanks

Andrew

Community
Andrew TaylorAndrew Taylor

closed as off-topic by Bill the LizardNov 11 '13 at 2:56

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Mac Xml Viewer

6 Answers

EditiX XML Editor (starts at $60) or maybe oXygen ($299 is less than $300, right).

You'll find a big list of the optiosn over at XMacL if you want more choices.

Matt SheppardMatt Sheppard
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If you use TextMate, there are plugins available such as http://ditchnet.org/xmlmate/

DGentryDGentryEdit xml free
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It's been a long time since I used Oxygen, but in the latest builds of eclipse (gannymede) there is a built in XML editor that works for about 90% of my use cases (XSD/DTD validation, auto-complete etc.)

Obviously eclipse is a Java application and therefore may feel clunky for you, but, worth a try from my perspective as it is a lot cheaper than $300

If you are after extensibility in your tool then look at using TextMate and an appropriate Bundle (or extend an existing bundle with new macros).

Xml Editor For Mac Os X

ClokeyClokey
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The latest JEdit Builds on the 4.3 branch combined with a wealth of plugins give you a lot of advanced XML/SLT/XQuery functionality.

The downsides are it's still a Java Application, with all the lipstick on a pig implications that brings. You'll also find inconsistent UI Metaphors in the various plugins. There's a lot of poking and prodding you'll need to do, and last time I checked the JEdit forums there was a lot of 'you idiot, it works like this' going on.

The upsides are free and legitimately powerful. I'm a BBEdit user, but I keep JEdit around for writing XQuery.

Alan StormAlan Storm
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Emacs has a nice XML mode, if you don't mind running that on os x.

IngridIngrid
Stephane PaquetStephane Paquet

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