Ash

On Atom's Tinkerability (and keeping in sync with Dropbox)

I recently switched from Chocolat to Atom as my text editor of choice. I have a lot of love for Chocolat, but the fact Atom is built using languages and techniques I already understand makes it a winner. Atom offers incredible tinkerability to a much wider range of its users, and there's already a pretty big collection of packages and themes. A basic understanding of CSS is all you need to begin tweaking any part of the UI, with the results of your hackery rendered in real time by the very editor window you're using. You can even inspect the UI using Chrome's Dev tools (when I saw this I was sold).

Atom Editor and Chrome Dev Tools

You had me at cmd + alt + i. Yes, that is a bitcoin ticker.

The result of this deep running extensibility is the ability to create a super-personalised editor environment. Syncing of settings is more important than ever, and is luckily very easy to setup with Dropbox. All Atom configuration and packages (including themes) are (for now1) stored at ~/.atom. A symlink at this location to Dropbox is all that's required.

First of all you'll want to close Atom and then open up Terminal.

Move your existing Atom config to Dropbox

Use Finder or, in Terminal:

mv ~/.atom /path/to/dropbox

This will point to the .atom directory on Dropbox.

ln -s /path/to/dropbox/.atom ~/.atom

This is all that's required! You can make any system you use Atom on point to Dropbox. Packages and configuration will be kept in sync.


1. I say for now as there is some debate about Atom following the convention of the OS it is operating under (OS X, Unix and Windows all have their own locations for storing app configuration). Even if this does change, it should still be possible to symlink to a Dropbox-stored directory.

#Atom#Dropbox