Komodo Edit also features other amenities, such as code folding and simple text zooming using the mouse wheel.
I compared it with jEdit, editing a simple snippet of CSS, and it fared significantly better jEdit’s auto-completion stopped working after a few attempts. Komodo’s auto-completion feature is excellent, similar to the one found in Microsoft Visual Studio: You get a scrollable menu with completion options, rather than having to blindly tab between options. For example, the Find feature works just like the one found in recent Firefox versions, with live search and a bar along the bottom of the window. If Firefox is your browser of choice, you would feel right at home with Komodo. Its built-in FTP client lets you access remotely hosted files without having to create a project or download an entire directory tree. On a day-to-day basis, working with Komodo Edit is a pleasant experience. Too bad this wasn’t mentioned in the application or documentation, though it is in the marketing materials. I later discovered I could have simply dragged the file and dropped it over the Komodo icon. I ended up locating an obscure folder containing all other schemes and putting the file there to make Komodo Edit recognize it. The scheme selection dialog didn’t provide any hints, nor did the online help system. Once I had the scheme file on disk, installing it proved trickier.