

Fixed swap_line_up and swap_line_down transforming tabs into spaces.Fixed block carets changing the way text selection works.Improved scrolling logic in some scenarios.Improved file indexing behavior in some scenarios.Fixed a crash in the Git repository handling.Git: Fixed UTF8 BOMs not being handled correctly in.Git: Improved performance with a large number of git repositories in the side bar.This can be changed via the allow_git_home_dir setting. Git: Git repositories at the top level of a users home directory are ignored for performance reasons.Various syntax highlighting improvements.Onwards to 3.1!ĭownloads and a full changelog are available on the Sublime Text 3 page. If your license key is for Sublime Text 1 or 2, then you can purchase an upgrade.įrom myself and the team at Sublime HQ, we're very proud of Sublime Text 3.0, and we hope you enjoy it as much as we do. If you purchased your Sublime Text license from February 2013 onwards, then it's already valid for Sublime Text 3.0. While it's a much larger application than 2, it feels leaner. Startup is faster, opening files is faster, and scrolling is more efficient. One of the areas I'm especially proud of in Sublime Text 3 is performance: it's significantly faster than Sublime Text 2 along every axis. There's too much to list, but combined the difference is night and day. However the difference is frequently felt in the hundreds of improvements that don't warrant being featured on their own: spell checking works better, automatic indentation does the right thing more often, word wrapping handles source code better, high DPI screens are properly supported, and Goto Anything is smarter.

If you'd like to see the full list of changes, the team has made a dedicated page for them.Ĭertainly there are big features that 3.0 has: Goto Definition, a new syntax highlighting engine, a new UI, and an expanded API. I wanted to highlight some of the changes from Sublime Text 2 here, however it's surprisingly hard: virtually every aspect of the editor has been improved in some way, and even a list of the major changes would be too long. Some of the other highlights are big syntax highlighting improvements, touch input support on Windows, Touch Bar support on macOS, and apt/yum/pacman repositories for Linux. Compared to the last beta, 3.0 brings a refreshed UI theme, new color schemes, and a new icon.
