The Good Tech Companies - Developers Are Ditching Basic Text Editors—Here’s What They Want Instead
Episode Date: January 30, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/developers-are-ditching-basic-text-editorsheres-what-they-want-instead. Many developers find... that rich text editors have become important parts of content management systems, CRMs, productivity platforms, and e-learning solutions. Check more stories related to programming at: https://hackernoon.com/c/programming. You can also check exclusive content about #rich-text-editor, #froala, #developers, #software-engineering-tools, #state-of-collaborative-editing, #2024-rte-survey, #ai-powered-rich-text-editor, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @filestack. Learn more about this writer by checking @filestack's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Many developers find that rich text editors have become important parts of content management systems, CRMs, productivity platforms, and e-learning solutions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This audio is presented by Hacker Noon, where anyone can learn anything about any technology.
Developers are ditching basic text editors, here's what they want instead.
By filestack, as we head into 2025, many developers find that rich text editors,
RTEs, are no longer just small features tucked into larger products.
Instead, these editors have become important parts of content management systems,
CRMs,
productivity platforms, and e-learning solutions.
A few years ago, basic text formatting was enough.
Now, developers want more customization, better performance, stronger scalability, and even advanced features like eye-driven help.
Recent data from CKEditor's 2024 State of Collaborative Editing and TinyMCE's 2024 RTE Survey shows these
new priorities very clearly. Key takeaways. Developers prioritize customization, seeking
full control to tailor rich text editors to their needs. Performance is the top concern,
with lightweight editors like Froala providing faster load times and smoother experiences.
Scalability is essential for handling growing user bases and integrating with cloud infrastructures.
Demand for AI-powered features is increasing, moving beyond basic formatting to include
predictive text and grammar checks. Rich text editors are now core infrastructure
components in modern applications, crucial for content creation and collaboration.
Trend number one. More control and customization. To start, many developers now need rich text editors that fit their unique needs. According to TinyMCE's 2024 RTE survey, 52% of developers
want full control over their editor's experience. This number is important because it shows that most developers
do not want a one-size-fits-all editor. Instead, they want to shape the editor to match their
application's look, feel, and workflow. Some ways developers achieve this include adding or removing
toolbar buttons to match the project's brand and style, using flexible APIs to create custom
plugins or special formatting features,
including revision histories or other custom workflows that feel natural for their teams.
Backslash dot, by having this level of control, developers can make sure their editors feel like
a true part of their product, not just a separate tool. Trend number two, faster performance matters most. Next, performance has become a top priority.
In TinyMCE's 2024 RTE survey, 79% of respondents said performance is the most critical factor.
Today's users have high standards. If an editor loads slowly or feels sluggish,
they might lose focus or trust. By paying attention to performance,
developers can offer a better user experience. They can make
sure that, as soon as a user opens the editor, it feels responsive and stable.
Trend number 3. Scaling for bigger workloads. As we move forward, many products must handle
larger and more spread out user bases. According to the TinyMCE 2024 RTE survey,
43% of developers prioritize escalability. This makes sense because many apps
now serve global teams and large groups of users, sometimes all at once. Editors must handle many
users' editing documents at the same time, real-time changes appearing smoothly for everyone,
growing workloads as the product becomes more popular. By choosing an RTE that can scale without breaking, developers can trust that their
editor won't slow down or fail as more users rely on it.
In the end, scalability means fewer headaches when traffic increases or when a project grows
in complexity.
Trend number 4, going beyond, everyone expects basic formatting features like bold, italics,
and headings.
In fact, TinyMCE's 2024 RTE survey shows that 88% of developers consider these core features a given.
But basic formatting alone will not set an editor apart anymore.
Today, developers are looking for ways to enhance the writing process.
Some are interested in eye-driven tools, such as predictive text suggestions that
help users write faster. Grammar and spelling checks that improve the quality of content.
Intelligent formatting that adjusts style automatically.
Backslash dot. With these new features, the editor becomes more than just a text box.
It starts to feel like a smart assistant, guiding users and helping them produce better results.
This aligns with a finding in Cloudinary's 2023 State of Visual Media report, starts to feel like a smart assistant, guiding users and helping them produce better results.
This aligns with a finding in Cloudinary's 2023 State of Visual Media report,
68% of developers believe that AI's main benefit is enabling productivity and efficiency.
For instance, Froala integrates with Gemini and other popular generative tools to improve readability, SEO, and content quality.
Making such features accessible in a rich text
editor's toolbar helps users produce top-notch content in significantly less time. Because of
this, the most advanced RTEs have gone beyond basic formatting, making them a core part of
modern applications. Trend number 5. RTEs as core infrastructure. In the past, some teams saw RTEs as extras,
but that is no longer the case. CK Editors' 2024 State of Collaborative Editing
report found that 71% of respondents consider RTEs critical to their platforms.
This shows a big change. Developers now treat these editors as key building blocks.
For example in a CMS, a well-designed RTE lets marketing teams update
content without needing a developer for every small change. In a productivity suite, the RTE
supports collaboration by letting multiple people edit the same document at once, track changes,
and comment. In an e-learning platform, the RTE can help teachers build lessons, quizzes,
and discussions that include rich media and
advanced formatting. Backslash dot. Because these scenarios depend on a reliable editor,
choosing the right one is a big decision. Trend number 6. Real-world integration.
When we think about these trends, it is easy to see them in real products.
Many developers remember times when a slow editor frustrated writers or when a lack of
custom features forced the team to find odd workarounds. On the other hand, a good,
flexible editor can make everyone's job easier. For example, a CMS might use a customizable editor
that matches a company's brand and make sure that authors can create content without needing a
technical person. A collaboration tool might rely on an RTE that loads fast enough
to keep everyone's ideas flowing smoothly. An e-learning platform might use an RTE that handles
tables, images, videos, and special formatting to keep students engaged.
Trend number 7. Why a lean and flexible tool helps.
Some tools already fit these new needs without shouting about it. For example, an editor like
Froala stays light and easy to load while still offering ways to add custom features.
Furthermore, it scales nicely and works well with popular languages and frameworks.
According to the 2024 Stack Overflow Development Survey,
JavaScript continues to dominate as the most popular programming language. With 62,3% of developers
using JS, 39,8% desiring it, and 58,3% admiring it in 2024, it's here to stay. This highlights
the importance of using rich text editors that integrate into diverse technologies,
especially widely used ones. Such versatility allows developers to quickly adapt to new requirements,
such as changes in tech stacks, promoting scalability. A lean tool like Froala can
help developers meet their goals without slowing them down. Even if it is not the only choice,
it represents the kind of editor that developers now look for, something that does not get in the
way but instead supports growth and new ideas. In conclusion, the data from
these surveys is hard to ignore. More than half of developers want deep customization. Nearly four
fifths put performance first. Almost half focus in scalability. Also, a large majority expect at
least some baseline formatting, and many want even more advanced features, including eye-driven help.
These changes show that choosing the right RTE
is more important than ever. Today's developers need an editor that fits into their workflow,
loads quickly, scales easily, and offers a path to smarter features.
By paying attention to these factors, teams can pick an editor that feels like part of the product
to score, not just another add-on. References CK Editor, the 2024 State of
Collaborative Editing. CK Source, a Tiugo Technologies Company. NHTTPS colon slash slash
CK Editor. Calm, Insights, Collaboration Survey Report 2024, TinyMCE. The 2024 RTE Survey, Tiny Technologies, NHTTPS colon slash slash www.
Tiny, Cloud, Blog, Announcing the 2024 State of Rich Text Editors Report 2024
Stack Overflow Developer Survey, NHTTPS colon slash slash Survey, Stack Overflow,
Co, 2024, Cloudinary, 2023 State of Visual Media report nhttps colon slash slash cloudinary
com state of visual media report text editor market insights report global text editor market
overview and trends verified market reports nhttps colon slash slash www. Verified Market Reports, com, product, text editor market,
Froala official site. Why Froala, key features and benefits. NHTTPS colon slash slash www.
Froala, com. This article was originally published on Froala's blog.
Thank you for listening to this HackerNoon story, read by Artificial Intelligence.
Visit HackerNoon.com to read, write, learn and publish.