Sounds like an interesting idea… but I think it’s not really worth it without community plugins and like Benjamin said, it may not be very easy on iPhone…
Sublime Text app for iPhone!
I understand the with the constraints you mention above that a dedicated iphone/ipad app would involve too much time and effort to reproduce the same functionality but have you thought of a simple code viewer with the editing feature (and complexity that goes with it) switched off.
I have a lot of code which I can maintain and compile on my laptop/desktop but would love to be able to load the same code for viewing on my iphone/ipad when travelling. Cross device synchronization is not something you would need to worry about as for apple users the code is likely to be kept on an icloud drive, just provide access through an iOS app and allow us to view the code in language dependent colour coded glory 
Aren’t there already hundreds of apps that do this? This is my own opinion, but I think the market for read-only code viewers is an already saturate niche.
I don’t have the need for such an app, nor do I own an apple device, so I can’t make any good recommendations.
Well I have on both counts and I can tell you there isn’t much of a choice, hence my request
It’s very simple! I like working at sublime. A lot of useful features. Very handy tool. I use it for all kinds of purposes on pc and mac. And it would be very convenient for me to synchronize documents between all my devices and to open and modify the original sublime-text-app for iPhone!
Full keyboard / mouse support with IOS 13.4 looks interesting. I can’t wait to use sublime text on ipad 
Will it be possible to realize in the future? I have an android smartphone, and I enjoy using this app. But, as soon as I take my iPhone, I get so freaking annoyed that I cannot use a proper sublime text application for this freaking os. I understand the developers’ difficulties while creating such an app because I face the same issues working on my own app. My situation is even worse, as the freaking app crashed the android phone, not only the iPhone. I even used the salvage data recovery services as all the information was deleted.
There is no Sublime Text for Android, so there’s nothing to port to the iPhone. See Sublime Text app for iPhone! on why a mobile app won’t happen.
Hi @Jackeroo,
Took me a minute to realise that you were talking about people interested in using a version of Sublime Text on a mobile device rather than the developers of the product.
I’m in the process of deciding whether to purchase Sublime Text, and this thread led to reading the August 2021 post below from @bschaaf, who has also made a point of saying that he doesn’t own an Apple device (not a surprise, given what this post says):
Everything I’ve said in the iPhone thread still holds today. Sublime Text is not a usable interface for a mobile phone whatsoever. I have it running on my PinePhone and it’s an awful experience without a bigger screen and a keyboard/mouse plugged in. Tiny screens with only touch input simply require a different UI to desktops/laptops.
For tablets it’s a bit of a different story. For the iPad specifically the Apple Tax, App Store restrictions and general iOS limitations make it an incredibly unappealing platform to develop for.
Not only does that not get through to me, I’m left with the impression, quite apart from the issue of code editing on mobile devices, that the owners of Sublime Text aren’t interested in my business.* Indeed, I think that Mr. Schaaf and I are living on different planets. That impression gets reinforced when a company says that it has millions of users for a for-profit product, but only two staff, in their spare time, to support users, and has no presence on social media.
I figured that there would be basic training videos on YouTube, but I was wrong. Indeed, on YouTube VS Code is everywhere, but Sublime Text barely exists.** That’s cool if you don’t care about your market share, and figure that training purchasers ain’t your problem. Let other users do the training. Sure enough, the company recommends training documentation that cost it nothing because it was made by volunteers. It also recommends a video series that would bring the cost of a Sublime Text purchase to US$180.
Let me tell you what’s getting through to me: why VS Code has rapidly developed a dominant position in this market, and why the people behind VS Code probably don’t take Sublime Text seriously as a competitor.
*Panic wrote a detailed blog post about why it discontinued its mobile device code editor. Worth reading.
** Terence Martin, who has the only YouTube channel that regularly talks about Sublime Text, has 3,250 subscribers.
I’d sincerely love to know where we’ve said to have millions of users - afaik we don’t have any stats on our end for users, only for purchases. Closest I’ve gotten are packagecontrol stats, but those users aren’t unique. There’s also a huge difference between a user and a customer.
In any case when it comes to an iOS app the crude answer is that yes there isn’t any interest in that business for the reasons outlined in other comments.
For reference we have 6 staff including the owner/founder, two of which are dedicated towards Sublime Text. Technical support is something I’ve decided to take on and I do some of it in my free time because I enjoy helping people.
I think you should also consider that VS Code is backed by a huge company with virtually unlimited bank accounts. It’s really helpful to gain a domiant position.
I’d like to add my case to your statistics of what Sublime Text users want: I’m not in the slightest interested in using ST either on Android nor IOS.
@cici,
Microsoft’s backing of VS Code does not explain why the Sublime Text company is asking me for US$100, why ST4 is accompanied by a whopping 25% price increase over ST3, why company support consists of the part-time efforts of one person and why company marketing and user training is non-existent. I’m left with the impression that Sublime Text is a hobby business run by, and for, people whose world consists of Linux phones and the belief that Apple’s business practices make iOS “an incredibly unappealing platform to develop for.”
I’m also testing Sublime Merge and GitKraken. The latter, which appears to be a pretty small company, is making a serious effort to market its product to me and makes training resources, including for YouTube, on an on-going basis. Git Tower, another competitor, recently made a detailed video about Git for the non-profit freeCodeCamp. In the four months since, that video has had almost 600,000 views; to put it mildly, rather good exposure for Tower.
Sublime Text? It has no presence on YouTube, let alone makes instructional videos. Instead, its resources page suggests a video series that costs US$80. How hard are these videos to make? It requires a basic screen capture app, a microphone and a company that is prepared to spend some of its manpower resources on acquiring and supporting users of the product.
I’m having lot of trouble understanding what Sublime Text is about as a business and why I should give it US$100, or US$170 with Merge.
I’m having lot of trouble understanding what Sublime Text is about as a business
Sublime HQ is primarily focused on making good tools, befitting our values for software development. That means doing things the “right way” even if it takes longer. I believe we’ve thus far primarily relied upon word of mouth for advertising, leaving our products to speak for themselves.
We don’t do instructional stuff beyond documenting our applications because for one it’s not in our wheelhouse and secondly we generally try to keep everything somewhat discoverable inside the application. Specifically in terms of an introduction to git I believe we decided against doing anything along those lines because there’s already plenty of high-quality git introductory tutorials and Sublime Merge is targeted at power-users who already know git.
Thanks @bschaaf,
Your post confirms my impression of what Sublime is about as a business. Interesting that Sublime marketing by word of mouth doesn’t include use of social media, except for a Twitter account that hasn’t been used for seven months.
I don’t see myself as a Sublime client as a matter of principle. I’m looking for a text editor and git client, not an alleged Hermès scarf for people in the know.
Just my 10 cents
I fail to understand why are you comparing MS’s VS Code against a company that wants to price their product ? Does it mean if Microsoft were to back any software product, there should always be free competitors for that product & no one can make a similar product and charge it ? I guess similar is not even the right term since VS Code & ST share completely different philosophies. SHQ has made a product, they want to sell it & make money for a living. That’s completely natural. The one thing that really baffles me is that people wanting a product to be priced low or for free is there is something else similar which is open source.
It’s an age of inflation, they cannot keep pricing their product the same for ever. Have you come across and goods or services where people made a living by charging it the same $ for years on end ?
The thing is, it’s really ease to state that it’s easy to do something and then understand the difficulty when actually doing it. I have never edited videos but I guess the main elements of professional videos are:
- Prepare some kind of written material to understand what you are going to present.
- Prepare flowcharts of how you are going to present.
- Setup all the necessary equipment.
- Record the actual thing (& maybe fail a few times when you realize that it’s not up to par)
- Edit the video (Which includes adding all the promo stuff, subtitles, video captions, additional information)
- Release the video (& deal with all of the post release hiccups)
- Post release & keep an eye out on the audience who ask questions.
To me that seems like the job for an entire team. So where are you going to spend the time. Developing the editor or making marketing stuff ? Sure SHQ could hire someone to do it, but that’s up to them.
I was responding to a comment about Microsoft’s resources. I have no problem with Sublime charging for its products, and I have said nothing suggesting otherwise.
If there’s a claim that inflation is behind the 25% price increase, I’d love to see the explanation. That is a whopping price increase (if I understand correctly, it followed another price increase a year or two before), and was prior to pandemic-related inflation.
Unlike you, I have made screen capture videos, and indeed I’m making one now. They require either a script or an outline, but are otherwise dead simple to make. In any event, @bschaaf has stated why Sublime doesn’t make them, and the reason is unrelated to your point.
