Atom was developed in 2008 by
GitHub founder
Chris Wanstrath as a text editor using the
Electron Framework (originally called Atom Shell), a framework designed as the base for Atom. Between May 2015 and December 2018,
Facebook developed Nuclide and Atom
IDE projects to turn Atom into an
integrated development environment (IDE). In 2018 when
Microsoft announced they would be acquiring GitHub, users expressed concern that Microsoft might discontinue Atom, as it competed with Microsoft's
Visual Studio Code. The future GitHub CEO
Nat Friedman assured users that development and support for Atom would continue. However, within four years, development ceased. On June 8, 2022,
GitHub announced shutdown of Atom development and archival of all development repositories of Atom by December 15, 2022. Unlike Atom, Zed would be written in
Rust instead of the
Electron framework. On January 30, 2023, GitHub announced a breach which exposed "a set of encrypted code signing certificates" some of which were used to sign Atom releases. GitHub advised users to downgrade to earlier versions of Atom signed with a different key. Following Atom's end-of-life, development continued on a community
fork named Pulsar. == License ==