ZeroBrane Studio is a lightweight cross-platform Lua IDE with code completion, syntax highlighting, remote debugger, code analyzer, live coding, and debugging support for various Lua engines (Lua 5.1, Lua 5.2, Lua 5.3, Lua 5.4, LuaJIT, LÖVE, Moai, Gideros, Corona, Marmalade Quick, Cocos2d-x, OpenResty/Nginx, Torch7, Redis, GSL-shell, Adobe Lightroom, Lapis, Moonscript, and others).
- Small, portable, and cross-platform (Windows, macOS, and Linux).
- Written in Lua and is extensible with Lua packages.
- Syntax highlighting and folding for 125 languages and file formats.
- Project view with auto-refresh and ability to hide files and directories from the list.
- Bundled with several of the most popular Lua modules (luasocket, luafilesystem, lpeg, and luasec) compiled for all supported Lua versions.
- Auto-complete for functions, keywords, and custom APIs with scope-aware completion for variables.
- Scope-aware variable indicators for Lua code.
- Integrated debugger with local and remote debugging for Lua 5.1, Lua 5.2, Lua 5.3, Lua 5.4, LuaJIT, and other Lua engines.
- Interactive console to directly test code snippets with local and remote execution.
- Live coding with Lua, LÖVE, Gideros, Moai, Corona SDK, GSL-shell, and other engines.
- Static analysis to catch errors and typos during development.
- Function outline.
- Go to definition navigation.
- Multi-cursor editing with scope-aware variable selection and renaming.
- Fuzzy search with
Go To File
, project-wideGo To Symbol
navigation, andInsert Library Function
. - Find and replace in multiple files with preview and undo.
- Several ways to extend the current functionality:
- packages (
packages/
): plugins that provide additional functionality; - translations (
cfg/i18n/
): translations of the menus and messages to other languages; - user configuration (
cfg/
): settings for various components, styles, color themes, and other preferences.
- packages (
- A short and simple overview for those who are new to this development environment.
- A list of frequently asked questions about the IDE.
- Tutorials and demos that cover debugging and live coding for different environments.
- Tips and tricks.
The IDE can be installed into and run from any directory. There are three options to install it:
- Download installation package for the latest release for individual platforms (Windows, OSX, or Linux);
- Download snapshot of the repository for each of the releases, which works for all platforms;
- Clone the repository to access the current development version; this option also works for all platforms.
No compilation is needed for any of the installation options, although the scripts to compile required libraries for all supported platforms are available in the build/
directory.
See the installation section in the documentation for further details and uninstallation instructions.
The IDE can be launched by using the zbstudio
command with slight variations depending on whether a packaged installation or a repository copy is used:
- Windows: Run
zbstudio
from the directory that the IDE is installed to or create a shortcut pointing tozbstudio.exe
. - Linux: Run
zbstudio
when installed from the package installation or run./zbstudio.sh
when using a snapshot/clone of the repository. - macOS: Launch the
ZeroBrane Studio
application if installed or run./zbstudio.sh
when using a snapshot/clone of the repository.
The general command for launching is the following: zbstudio [option] [<project directory>] [<filename>...]
.
- Open files:
zbstudio <filename> [<filename>...]
. - Set project directory (and optionally open files):
zbstudio <project directory> [<filename>...]
. - Overwrite default configuration:
zbstudio -cfg "string with configuration settings"
, for example:zbstudio -cfg "editor.fontsize=12; editor.usetabs=true"
. - Load custom configuration file:
zbstudio -cfg <filename>
, for example:zbstudio -cfg cfg/xcode-keys.lua
.
All configuration changes applied from the command line are only effective for the current session.
If you are loading a file, you can also set the cursor on a specific line or at a specific position by using filename:<line>
and filename:p<pos>
syntax (0.71 ).
In all cases only one instance of the IDE will be allowed to launch by default: if one instance is already running, the other one won't launch, but the directory and file parameters passed to the second instance will trigger opening of that directory and file(s) in the already started instance.
See CONTRIBUTING.
ZeroBrane LLC: Paul Kulchenko ([email protected])
Luxinia Dev: Christoph Kubisch ([email protected])
The Estrela project that this IDE is based on has been merged into ZeroBrane Studio. If you have used Estrela for graphics shader authoring, you can use this GraphicsCodePack to get access to all API files, specifications and tools.
See LICENSE.