Another day, another text editor

I'm sure some (a ton of) people are thinking this. I'm definitely thinking it. It seems with the wild success of Sublime Text 2/3, there's some sort of race to achieve the perfect editor. I really can't complain about it though. I'm really looking forward to what the future holds as development becomes more and more advance. There's a ton of text editors already out there, but check out some of these newer ones that I've just learned about in the last year or so:

There's so many different little things that these code editors are doing to improve a developer's coding experience. I generally think it's these little things that make a good editor. It's also probably largely why Sublime is so successful and favorable by many. Sublime Text is the current king of the little things. Sublime Text comes with an API for creating packages which allow developers from all over the world to hook into the editor and share their custom plugin. These "little things" or plugins/packages are what makes Sublime Text a great editor. I get to customize and tailor it to my needs.

The problem is that the Sublime Text 3 API and packages are custom, not well documented and tested, and Python based (I can't vouch for the validity of that claim having never having written Python or a Sublime Text plugin, only stating what I've read/heard). Here's a good summary I found on Hacker News by user Kansface of his opinion: