I don’t use Notepadqq anywhere (I use kate btw), but on my KDE Neon system it’s currently showing:
$snapinfonotepadqqname:notepadqqsummary:ANotepad++-likeeditorforLinux.publisher:DanieleDiSarli(danieleds)store-url:https://snapcraft.io/notepadqqlicense:GPL-3.0description:|
It helps developers by providing all you can expect from a general purpose text editor, such as
syntax highlighting for more than 100 different languages, code folding, color schemes, file
monitoring, multiple selection and much more.
You can search text using the power of regular expressions. You can organize documents side by
side. You can use real-time highlighting to find near identifiers in no time.
snap-id:6iueWFAtx9P2OQz4SIW64Kry9hT8aUCLchannels:latest/stable:1.4.82018-09-14(855)151MB-latest/candidate:↑latest/beta:2.0.0-beta+git2019-10-12(890)201MBclassiclatest/edge:2.0.0-beta+git2019-10-16(897)197MBclassic
It seems to be a dead project (the last release on GitHub is that same 2.0 beta from 2019), but looking at the snapcraft.yaml file, it looks like it’s because they’re vendoring in a pretty big chunk of KDE and gtk libraries. 2019 was before I started doing anything with snaps or flatpaks for desktops so I’m not sure what the state of KDE content snaps was then (I know there was a GNOME one because the core18 gnome content snap is installed on my system for uhh… some app that I have), but these days for desktop apps there are content snaps for gnome (published by Canonical) and KDE Frameworks (published by KDE) to deduplicate those dependencies.
OK that’s better than what I’ve seen. Notepadqq I think was 2.4gb and I said no to that one. But again I don’t run Ubuntu.
I don’t use Notepadqq anywhere (I use kate btw), but on my KDE Neon system it’s currently showing:
$ snap info notepadqq name: notepadqq summary: A Notepad++-like editor for Linux. publisher: Daniele Di Sarli (danieleds) store-url: https://snapcraft.io/notepadqq license: GPL-3.0 description: | It helps developers by providing all you can expect from a general purpose text editor, such as syntax highlighting for more than 100 different languages, code folding, color schemes, file monitoring, multiple selection and much more. You can search text using the power of regular expressions. You can organize documents side by side. You can use real-time highlighting to find near identifiers in no time. snap-id: 6iueWFAtx9P2OQz4SIW64Kry9hT8aUCL channels: latest/stable: 1.4.8 2018-09-14 (855) 151MB - latest/candidate: ↑ latest/beta: 2.0.0-beta+git 2019-10-12 (890) 201MB classic latest/edge: 2.0.0-beta+git 2019-10-16 (897) 197MB classic
It seems to be a dead project (the last release on GitHub is that same 2.0 beta from 2019), but looking at the snapcraft.yaml file, it looks like it’s because they’re vendoring in a pretty big chunk of KDE and gtk libraries. 2019 was before I started doing anything with snaps or flatpaks for desktops so I’m not sure what the state of KDE content snaps was then (I know there was a GNOME one because the core18 gnome content snap is installed on my system for uhh… some app that I have), but these days for desktop apps there are content snaps for gnome (published by Canonical) and KDE Frameworks (published by KDE) to deduplicate those dependencies.