Is there any? Right now i am using netbeans for this! Just to write some notes.
+2
A:
Most likely you didn't want to hear this, yet emacs can be configured to use subversion, and is free. If you decide to dive into that, maybe aquamacs is something you'd like, its a mac-flavored emacs.
moritz
2010-01-08 10:19:49
aquamacs has cvs support out of the box?
itsaboutcode
2010-01-08 10:24:55
Emacs can out of the box use multiple version control backends with the same keybindings. Also, I'd recommend http://emacsformacosx.com/ rather than Aquamacs. I'm not a user of OSX myself but most Mac/Emacs fans I've talked to don't think highly of Aquamacs.
Noufal Ibrahim
2010-01-08 10:25:38
you're right there, i don't use aquamacs myself, but the "common look" may attract new users..
moritz
2010-01-08 10:55:01
A:
TextMate is a great editor that supports Subversion however it is not free.
There is a 30 day free trial. It might do the job temporarily?
The 30 day trial works out as 30 days of using the program as a opposed to 30 days after you install it.
Gordon
2010-01-08 10:30:34
You can use it for free for 30 days until you can find a better solution or possibly purchase the program.
Gordon
2010-01-08 10:35:17
A:
Xcode, Eclipse, Macvim, aquaemacs, and TextMate (not free, but worth the price if you like it) are pretty standard.
wisty
2010-01-08 10:39:09
Xcode and Eclipse are great but since i just have to write notes i was looking for something light weight like TextMate but free.
itsaboutcode
2010-01-08 10:42:51