Sublime Forum

ST3 Plans? What happened to all the activity last year?

#37

@wbond

I using ST for so many years, so sad to see the current stage of this product(ST3).
How many years, this version is has been under development???
I am sorry for what I have to say.

ST is slowly slowly DEAD, it was the best the code editor for long time, but now webstorm and vs code are very good too.
but you drop it, doing minimum work in every year. just enough let people think ST is not dead project.

for last update was in — 23 September 2016, from today is 6 months ago.
you doing like this every year, for begin of year, you do minimum work, then drop it rest of the year until next year.

I understand you are busy. if you not care about ST, why you not sell it to other company which could really keep this product LIVE. it has been 4-5 years this version 3 still not complete.

I am a big fans with ST, but really not like the attitude of the development’s team or person.
hire more people to working ST or sell to other company whom care and will continuing development!

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#38

Jon and I did 23 dev releases in 2016, and three betas. Those numbers speak for themselves.

We spent a lot of time improving the language syntaxes also, with well over 50k lines of definitions changed.

Not all work is suitable to be released in small batches. Just to assure you, I work full time for Jon on Sublime Text. I would be pretty silly of Jon to pay me a full-time senior software engineer’s salary if he wanted to do the minimum of work.

The product and community are still very much alive. Over 800,000 users checked for package updates yesterday. In the blog post for the last beta release, Jon mentioned that we are almost ready for 3.0. Granted, the 3.0 beta is used by at least 95% of the users of Package Control, so changing the version to 3.0 stable is more of a symbolic thing.

Sublime HQ isn’t going anywhere and we are continuing to work on making Sublime Text even better. If you aren’t using ST3 because it is labeled beta, I recommend you try it out. There are so many improvements and fixes over ST2 that it would be a waste not to take advantage of them.

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#39

Just to clarify, Jon hired me to work on Sublime Text in January 2016, so there are currently two of us working on the core.

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#40

@wbond

I am sorry for what I said here.
I am not to try hurt any one here. just express my sadness of current state of ST. many years, I was hopeful this ST3 final release, but it’s not.
we are all see the works has been done in development, but my opinion is that this is not enough.

many user like me, are looking forward the new version release, but for many years, it’s not.
if this is not enough people working on this product, the owner of ST should hire more.
we all have a good wish to ST. we all want to ST be better and continuing development more important to make money for your company…

and @wbond, if my words are hurt you feeling then I am apology for this.

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#41

@wbond,

  1. Do I understand correctly that only you and @jps works in Sublime Text private code and get money for it?

  2. You discussed to make Sublime Text open source? I understood that you are very very good programmers, but I think that 2 developers is small for such a large-scale project as Sublime Text. Other developers could accelerate the development process and fix issues.

    I may be wrong, but it seems to me that the Sublime Text can grow less intensively than [Atom] (https://github.com/atom/atom) and other open source text editors.

Thanks.

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#42

Yes, that is correct.

I can’t speak for Jon on this regard. However, imagine you spent more than ten years of your life coming up with a great product, building something unique and powerful, and making sacrifices along the way. Would you just give it all away and go find something else to make your living from?

Not to mention, running an open source project generally involves much different work than actually building a product.

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#43

Also, it’s much more work than people generally think. Pretty much all successful open source projects are backed by large companies that are able to make the necessary investments to keep large teams afloat (lots of costs and no way to earn anything back). The Atom team for instance is pretty big and they spend a lot of time coordinating the community.

I’d say a focussed team of two developers is more likely to develop a great product than to manage a sprawling open source project with as many users as Sublime. Of course, you have to design well, keep the codebase small and be focussed. All of which are important anyway, and exponentially easier to do if there are fewer people involved.

This approach probably means Sublime has different goals and priorities than Emacs (extensibility), Atom (be even more extensible than Emacs), VS Code (tightly integrated Typescript development), TextMate (a proper editor for OSX) etc. Which is fine, because if they are doing those things, Sublime can be free to do something else. Maintaining feature parity with competitors is only one strategy, it’s not necessarily the smart thing to do. The fact that we’re even discussing this considering the editor landscape today, could tell you that it’s offering something that’s compelling all by itself.

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#44

TextMate is another interesting example here, in a sense—they’ve gone open source, and we don’t really hear much about them anymore. TM2 is still being actively developed, but it doesn’t really have a sense of being thriving. On the flip side, BBEdit is also being actively developed, and every major release brings some pretty cool stuff. (It vies with ST as my favorite editor, depending on the task at hand.)

Also, +1 for the shoutout to Acorn. :slightly_smiling:

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#45

Super glad to hear this. I like ST3 a lot, but worried about it being abandoned due to the lack of blog posts and twitter comments – so I decided to check these forums. Your replies throughout this thread have been very, very encouraging to me!

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#46

I’m a longtime TextEdit user. I started using Atom last year, and I’m dissatisfied with its responsiveness, so I installed Sublime Text 3 today. All of which is to say, I’m new here, so I apologize if this is a delicate question.

When do you all expect SublimeText 3 to come out of beta? What’s the outlook for GA?

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#47

Hmm… I won’t speak for the powers that be. But ST3 is pretty solid. My guess is it will come out of beta when Jon and Will decide it is ready. But there’s no reason not to commit now. You pay now you will still have access to the full version. I’m just waiting for upgrade pricing for ST2->ST3. But my ST2 key has worked throughout.

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#48

Sublime Text 3 “Beta” is stable enough in my opinion. :slightly_smiling:

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#49

https://www.sublimetext.com <= It’s not really beta any more. They just forgot to remove “Sublime Text 3 is currently in beta. The latest build is 3126.” from the download page. I guess it’s just there as an excuse to make changes whenever Jon wants.

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#50

It’s still beta. The official release will require an upgrade. That is why I still get away with using my old ST2 license on it. I’d argue that the beta builds are still pretty reliable though.

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#51

I do get the feeling it’s close though, with the updated styling and everything. Stabilize it, update the website, and it might be ready to go.

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#52

For what it’s worth, this blog post from back in 2011 says:

Traditionally, the Beta tag has been used on software to indicate
it’s feature complete, and is going through testing before the
final release. That’s not the case with the Sublime Text 2 Beta,
which is ready to use, but subject to change. New releases will be
coming out, and they’ll be adding new functionality and changing
how things work.

People use Sublime Text 2 every day to get real work done - if you
haven’t tried it yet, now is a great time.

Granted it’s talking about Sublime Text version 2 and not version 3, but given that the download page prominently talks about Sublime Text 3 and then says "Sublime Text 2 is also still available" you could take that to mean that the development practices probably remain the same.

At the very least, I consider myself a people (although opinions may vary ;)) and I’ve been using ST3 for 100% of my development work for the entire time I’ve been using it (both professional at my day job and my hobby work in my spare time), and it’s been rock solid for me.

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#53

We don’t have a specific date, but a few things we want to accomplish in this dev cycle. Generally we don’t comment publicly on exactly what we are planning to work on. The priorities tend to change – sometimes based on complexity, impact on the users and what we think will contribute to a solid product. Sometimes we implement part of a feature and hold off on finishing it because something else needs to be implemented first for it to really work.

As others have mentioned, if you purchase a license now, it is a full Sublime Text 3 license.

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Version 3 release date ETA?
#54

If buy a license now (or already bought a license but after the ST3 beta began), you will not need to upgrade. At least that’s my understanding.

If you bought a license before the ST3 beta began then the ST2 license you have works for ST3 beta and dev builds, but you will need to upgrade after ST3 is ‘officially’ released. That upgrade will cost $30 ($11 for some few who bought shortly before the ST3 beta started).

See the following for details: https://www.sublimetext.com/blog/articles/2013/02

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#55

Yes, my point is when the official release hits (and it is out of beta) “I” will need to buy an upgrade. I was not referring to people who bought one recently. I bought mine a good long while ago.

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#56

Yeah, that’s me too. I’m ready to pony up my $30 or so anytime.

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