This app was mentioned in 24 comments, with an average of 2.63 upvotes
I don't think so, as Scriptable is based off of the iOS JavaScript engine. It's highly personalized with widgets and the entire design style being based off of iOS. Every feature that has been added from generic JavaScript is from some iOS engine - dictation, font library, the keychain, etc.
If you want an alternative, there are JavaScript IDEs for Android, but of course it's not Scriptable.
<strong>DroidEdit (free code editor)</strong> - Search for "Droidedit" on the <strong>Play Store</strong>
^bleep ^bloop ^I ^am ^not ^a ^bot. ^Apparently ^this ^subreddit ^doesn't ^have ^the ^app ^robot ^that ^/r/Android ^has.
Yes, it's possible. I don't think you'll enjoy the experience of developing on tablet. You'll miss out on all the helpful tools available to desktop.
All you need is a code editor app like DroidEdit.
I recommend DroidEdit PRO. Been using it as my main text editor since the ICS days of Android. It's almost like the Sublime Text editor but for Android.
Ah, I would just use an external editor if you don't like MiX's. Perhaps DroidEdit?
You could also just use nano or vim in Termux if you're a purist!
DroidEdit Free has LilyPond highlighting. Is that what you're asking? I don't think there's an app that can compile on android. Although there is a script that can use lilybin which maybe could be turned into an app someday.
I don't use it. Do you also have word installed? My only guess is that they didn't build in a .txt editor so it defaults to downloading the file.
Another option would be using DroidEdit. I've used the pro version before for Dropbox and it worked pretty well.
I'm not gonna lie, I don't even remember the last time I've used it, can't tell you much about it.
I mainly downloaded it because it is made by the same guy as DroitEdit Pro.
That is true, I guess I should have said simple web development, though you'd be surprised how versatile an Android tablet is.
Chrome Beta has developer tools on Android. Syntax highlighting isn't a problem, I just found this and this on the play store, and if all your stuff is hosted (which most likely is), then it's not that far off.
DroidEdit does programmer-type editing. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.aor.droidedit
Bot fail. Here you go: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.aor.droidedit
Get Bluetooth keyboard and a decent code editor on your phone!
I don't think you'll be able to use the IDE in the web browser on Android.
What I recommend is using an app like DroidEdit or Codeanywhere and connect it to the server by FTP. Also, I don't know exactly how Cloud9 works, but if it has ssh access, you can use a Terminal emulator to ssh into the server and program inside that terminal.
I also recommend the Hacker's Keyboard as it gives you every key on the keyboard on your Android device.
Apps I've found useful:
Droidedit for writing/editing code, allows for syntax highlighting in multiple languages.
Termux allows you to access a linux environment on the device, including access to local storage so you can run code as you would any other linux system.
Juice SSH SSH client so that you can open a shell on a remote computer.
Hacker's keyboard is a very customisable keyboard that makes it easier to write code using normal PC conveniences that might be missing on other android keyboards e.g. ctrl-c, ctrl-v, ctrl-z etc
DroidEdit (free code editor) | 3.7 rating | Free | 1,000,000+ downloads | Search manually
> DroidEdit is a text and source code editor for android tablets and phones with the following features: ★ Syntax Highlighting for several languages (C, C++, C#, Java, HTML, CSS, Javascript, Python, Ruby, Lua, LaTeX, SQL, ...) ★ ...
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You can get a text editor for Android at the very least: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.aor.droidedit&hl=en
...and this terminal emulator for access to the command line: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=jackpal.androidterm&hl=en
Script Layer for Android: https://github.com/damonkohler/sl4a
Should be entirely possible, yeah... though hardly practical, right?
I guess you mean on android: not really. Just pick any with Lua syntax highlighting. DoroidEdit looks somewhat useful, though.