![]() ![]() ![]() Even if you're not a coder, DroidEdit is still a capable and handy little text editor, on the level of Notepad++ for Windows. ![]() You can change the color scheme of the app to one of the available defaults or set your own and change the font size, but the font style is fixed. The app has a number of language syntaxes available (C/C++, C#, CSS, LaTex, Perl, Python, and many more). Line wrap can be turned on and off, you can search and replace text, and there's a "writer mode" that turns off autocorrect and turns on a spell-checker. It's not much to look at, but the options available inside the app make it suitable for both coding and writing. DroidEdit ( free)Įnlarge / DroidEdit looks like a crunchy text editor, but it can manage more than just coding.ĭroidEdit is by far the most flexible of the text editors we tried. Its controls aren’t quite as granular, but it has more creative options that you can’t find in Snapseed, like the ability to add and control color splashes into black-and-white photos. Honorable mention goes to Pixlr Express, which Google recommended on its list of must-have Android apps for 2012. Snapseed allows you to pull in photos to edit from cloud services like Box or Dropbox, which can be handy if you tablet is stuck with only a front-facing single-megapixel camera. Fortunately, the recent Google acquisition Snapseed takes itself seriously enough to forego the word art and gives you the essentials like cropping and adjusting exposure, saturation, contrast, and brightness, as well as tools for selective adjust and an “autocorrect button.” There are a handful of modest photo effects that are not too cheesy. The Google Play store is not overflowing with powerful image editing applications-there are many more apps that will let you pop clip-art cats or Eiffel Towers into your pictures in lieu of doing a simple crop. Enlarge / Snapseed surged to the forefront of image editors remarkably quickly. ![]()
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