A hex editor. Includes these features:
- Does not require an existing file to edit
- Unlimited undo and redo
- Full copy and paste functionality of both hex and text
- Find and replace
- Customizable font and color scheme
- User-settable text encoding
- Data inspector supporting both big-endian and little-endian values
When Power Keys are enabled and the focus is on the hex side of the editor, the following keys will have the following effects:
Z
- Replace selection with all zeros (00 00
)Y
- Replace selection with all ASCII spaces (20 20
)X
- Replace selection with all ones (FF FF
)I
- Invert selected bits (00 00
→FF FF
and vice versa)V
- Replace selection with random dataS
- Swap selected bytes / reverse endianness (01 02
→02 01
and vice versa)N
- Swap selected nybbles (12 34
→43 21
and vice versa)R
- Swap selected bits (80 00
→00 01
and vice versa)[
- Rotate selected bits to the left (ROL
)]
- Rotate selected bits to the right (ROR
)<
- Shift selected bits to the left (ASL
)>
- Shift selected bits to the right with sign extension (ASR
)?
- Shift selected bits to the right with zero extension (LSR
)+
- Increment selected value-
- Decrement selected valueH
- Switch between hex and decimal addressesL
- Switch between big and little endian
I went looking for a (graphical) hex editor on Linux. After trying several (GHex, Bless, Okteta, wxHexEditor), I was disappointed to find not a single one that didn't have at least one of the following issues:
- Requires an existing file to edit
- Copy and paste limited to the text side
- Copy and paste limited to the hex side
- Copy and paste on the hex side picky about whitespace
- Copy and paste completely broken
- Saving completely broken
I had had enough of everything I tried not getting the basics right and decided to do what I always do in these situations: write my own. I had in fact already written one years ago, inspired by an old Macintosh program called HexEdit, as part of a project called Resplendence. So I took a look at my decade-old code, said "what a mess," started over, and rewrote it as a standalone application.
Be hexcellent to each other.