May 12, 2019 rafeca
Atom 1.37 has shipped! This version introduces a complete flow for handling review comments you’ve received on a pull request and an experimental faster mode in fuzzy finder that dramatically improves its performance.
Read moreApril 9, 2019 smashwilson
Atom 1.36 has shipped! Upgrade today to open single files in large directories much faster, see pull request review comments from GitHub, specify multiple wrap guides at once, and more.
Read moreMarch 12, 2019 annthurium
With Atom 1.35 comes a fix for the recent Chrome vulnerability, ability to view the full diff for pull requests directly within Atom, and a variety of enhancements and stability improvements.
Read moreJanuary 8, 2019 jasonrudolph
Atom 1.34 is out! With this release, you’ll enjoy a host of enhancements to help you craft the perfect commit, including a faster diff view, the ability to preview all staged changes, and support for commit message templates.
Read moreDecember 12, 2018 asheren
At this time, Facebook has decided to retire their open source efforts on Nuclide, the Atom-IDE, and other associated repos.
Read moreNovember 28, 2018 kuychaco
Atom 1.33 is out! With this release, you’ll enjoy built-in Rust support, improved discoverability for Git and GitHub functionality, and faster performance for bracket matching.
Read moreNovember 14, 2018 sguthals
We want to make Atom better, and we need your help. We’ve started conducting usability interviews where we can get direct feedback from humans about how they work and how what we build affects that workflow.
Read moreOctober 23, 2018 maxbrunsfeld
Atom 1.32 is out! In this release, we’ve cut Atom’s memory consumption and enabled the new Tree-sitter parsing system by default.
Read moreOctober 9, 2018 jasonrudolph
When working with text, it’s common to find yourself performing a certain set of actions in the same order, time and time again. By taking advantage of Atom’s hackability, you can eliminate this repetition with a custom command to perform an entire sequence of actions for you.
Read moreOctober 2, 2018 benbalter
Google recently announced beta support for Linux apps on Chrome OS as part of its “Crostini” project. If you have one of the supported Chromebooks getting Atom running takes just a few clicks.
Read more