Best Application Development Software for Linux - Page 26

Compare the Top Application Development Software for Linux as of December 2025 - Page 26

  • 1
    Hoppscotch

    Hoppscotch

    Hoppscotch LTD.

    Hoppscotch makes it easy to create and test your APIs, helping you to ship products faster. Create APIs faster, test them instantly, document and share them automatically. From prototyping to production - develop without switching tabs. Hoppscotch got everything you need to make API development easy. Create workspaces for your teams. Control access to your workspaces. Work together with your team in real-time. Deploy Hoppscotch on your own servers. Organize your requests in collections or folders and share them with your team. Manage your environment variables and use them everywhere. View and manage your request history. Modify headers, authenticate requests, generate random data, and much more. Test your APIs and write assertions for the response. Use Hoppscotch in your native language. We support 30+ languages. Track all the activities in your workspace. Who did what and when. Use your existing SSO provider to login to Hoppscotch. Manage your users, workspaces, and more.
    Starting Price: $19 per user per month
  • 2
    Opengrep

    Opengrep

    Opengrep

    Opengrep is an open-source static code analysis engine designed to identify security vulnerabilities within codebases. As a fork of Semgrep, it maintains a similar focus on providing fast and powerful code pattern search capabilities across more than 30 programming languages, including Python, JavaScript, and Go. Opengrep enables developers to define custom rules for pattern matching, facilitating the detection of potential security issues and promoting adherence to coding standards. By integrating Opengrep into the development workflow, teams can proactively address vulnerabilities, thereby enhancing the overall security and reliability of their software projects.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 3
    PhantomJS

    PhantomJS

    PhantomJS

    PhantomJS is a headless web browser scriptable with JavaScript, running on Windows, macOS, Linux, and FreeBSD. Utilizing QtWebKit as its back-end, it offers fast and native support for various web standards, including DOM handling, CSS selectors, JSON, Canvas, and SVG. This makes it an optimal solution for tasks such as page automation, screen capture, headless website testing, and network monitoring. For example, a simple script can load a webpage and capture it as an image.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 4
    HtmlUnit

    HtmlUnit

    HtmlUnit

    HtmlUnit is a "GUI-Less browser for Java programs" that models HTML documents and provides an API to interact with web pages, such as invoking pages, filling out forms, and clicking links, similar to a standard web browser. It offers fairly good JavaScript support, which is constantly improving and is capable of handling complex AJAX libraries, simulating browsers like Chrome, Firefox, or Edge depending on the configuration used. Typically used for testing purposes or retrieving information from websites, HtmlUnit is not a generic unit testing framework but is intended to simulate a browser within another testing framework such as JUnit or TestNG. It is utilized as the underlying "browser" by various open source tools like WebDriver, Arquillian Drone, and Serenity BDD, and is employed by many projects for automated web testing, including Apache Shiro, Apache Struts, and Quarkus.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 5
    Zombie.js

    Zombie.js

    Zombie.js

    Zombie.js is a lightweight, headless testing framework for Node.js that enables developers to simulate browser environments for testing client-side JavaScript code without the need for a graphical browser. It allows for the automation of web interactions such as form submissions, link clicks, and navigation, facilitating full-stack testing in a simulated environment. Developers can utilize Zombie.js to perform actions like visiting web pages, filling out forms, and asserting conditions within their test suites. The framework integrates seamlessly with testing libraries like Mocha, providing a streamlined approach to writing and executing tests.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 6
    SlimerJS

    SlimerJS

    SlimerJS

    SlimerJS is a free, open source scriptable browser for web developers, allowing interaction with web pages through external JavaScript scripts. It enables tasks such as opening web pages, clicking links, and modifying content, making it useful for functional tests, page automation, network monitoring, screen capture, and web scraping. Unlike PhantomJS, SlimerJS runs on top of Gecko, the browser engine of Mozilla Firefox, instead of WebKit, and can operate in both headless and non-headless modes. APIs of SlimerJS are similar to the APIs of PhantomJS but there are a few differences in their behavior. However, most of the scripts for PhantomJS run perfectly well with SlimerJS right now.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 7
    jBrowserDriver

    jBrowserDriver

    Daniel Hollingsworth

    jBrowserDriver is a programmable, embeddable web browser driver compatible with the Selenium WebDriver specification. It is headless, WebKit-based, and written in pure Java. The project is open source and licensed under the Apache License v2.0. To run jBrowserDriver from a remote Selenium server, start the remote Selenium server(s) and use the appropriate code to call jBrowserDriver remotely. For building from source, install and configure Maven v3.x and run mvn clean compile install from the project root. To use in Eclipse, either import the existing Java project from the root directory or import the Maven file. For usage, jBrowserDriver can be used like any other Selenium WebDriver or RemoteWebDriver and works with Selenium Server and Selenium Grid.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 8
    WebKit

    WebKit

    WebKit

    WebKit is a fast, open source web browser engine used by Safari, Mail, App Store, and many other applications on macOS, iOS, and Linux. It serves as the foundation for rendering web content and executing JavaScript in these applications. Developers can contribute to the project by reporting bugs or submitting code. Web developers can follow WebKit's development, check feature status, and download Safari Technology Preview to experiment with the latest web technologies. The project emphasizes real-world web compatibility, standards compliance, stability, performance, battery life, security, privacy, portability, usability, and ease of code modification. WebKit is open source and available under the BSD 2-Clause license, with the exception of the WebCore and JavaScriptCore components, which are available under the GNU Lesser General Public License.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 9
    Phaser

    Phaser

    Phaser

    Phaser is a fast, free, and fun open source HTML5 game framework that offers WebGL and Canvas rendering across desktop and mobile web browsers. It has been actively developed for over 10 years. Phaser is built on and around web standards and puts the browser first. Web export isn't an afterthought or checkbox on a feature list; it's our home. Phaser is fully open source, and you have unrestricted access to every last line of code in the core library. Phaser has more ready-made templates than any other game framework and is a great CLI tool. Games made with Phaser have been used as the cornerstone for marketing campaigns for years. They've been deployed everywhere, including as prominent features on sites for major Hollywood film blockbusters, massive brand promotional campaigns, educational content, interactive experiences, TV shows, news reports, charity fund-raising broadcasts, live events marketing, and so many more.
    Starting Price: $9 per month
  • 10
    Defold

    Defold

    Defold

    Defold is a free and open source game engine designed for high-performance cross-platform game development. It comes fully featured out of the box, requiring no setup or configuration, allowing developers to simply download the editor and start creating. The engine includes a visual editor, code editor, Lua scripting, Lua debugger, scene editor, particle editor, and tilemap editor, and supports both 2D and 3D game development. With a single codebase and no need for external tools, Defold enables publishing to major platforms such as PlayStation5, PlayStation4, Nintendo Switch, Android, iOS, macOS, Linux, Windows, Steam, HTML5, and Facebook. It offers a component-based system for building games, allowing the use of basic building blocks to create complex behavior, and supports writing game logic using Lua. Developers can add new functionality from the asset portal, set up their own local build environment, and write native code to extend the engine.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 11
    MonoGame

    MonoGame

    MonoGame

    MonoGame is a free and open-source framework that allows developers to create cross-platform games using C# and other .NET languages. It supports multiple platforms, including Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, iOS, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, and Nintendo Switch. MonoGame provides a comprehensive set of features, such as 2D and 3D rendering, sound playback, input handling, and content management, enabling the development of high-quality games across various genres. The framework is a re-implementation of Microsoft's XNA 4 API, ensuring familiarity for developers with XNA experience. Notable games developed with MonoGame include "Streets of Rage 4," "Carrion," "Celeste," and "Stardew Valley." MonoGame is actively maintained by the MonoGame Foundation and its community, with ongoing updates and support.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 12
    Gideros

    Gideros

    Gideros

    Gideros is a free and open-source cross-platform game development framework that enables developers to create high-performance 2D games using the Lua programming language. It offers instant testing on real devices through Wi-Fi, eliminating the need for lengthy export or deployment processes. Built on C/C++ and OpenGL, Gideros ensures that games run at native speed, fully utilizing the power of CPUs and GPUs. The framework supports easy extension through plugins, allowing developers to import existing code in C, C++, Java, or Objective-C and bind it to Lua. Gideros provides its own class system with standard object-oriented programming practices, enabling clean and reusable code. The comprehensive development environment includes a lightweight IDE, players for desktops and devices, a texture packer, and a font creator. Gideros supports multiple platforms, including Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, Android, and HTML5.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 13
    raylib

    raylib

    raylib

    raylib is a simple and easy-to-use library to enjoy video game programming. It is a programming library to enjoy video game programming; no fancy interface, no visual helpers, no GUI tools or editors, just coding in a pure spartan-programmers way. raylib does not provide the typical API documentation or a big set of tutorials. The library is designed to be minimalistic and be learned just from a cheat sheet with all required functionality and a big collection of examples to see how to use that functionality. The best way to learn to code is by reading code. raylib supports multiple target platforms, it has been tested in the following ones but, technically, any platform that supports C language and OpenGL graphics (or similar) can run raylib or it can be very easily ported to. You can use raylib with multiple programming languages, there are over 60 bindings. raylib can be combined with several extra libraries for additional functionality.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 14
    AMPL

    AMPL

    AMPL

    AMPL is a powerful and intuitive modeling language designed to represent and solve complex optimization problems. It enables users to formulate mathematical models in a syntax that closely mirrors algebraic notation, facilitating a clear and concise representation of variables, objectives, and constraints. AMPL supports a wide range of problem types, including linear programming, nonlinear programming, mixed-integer programming, and more. One of its key strengths is the ability to separate models and data, allowing for flexibility and scalability in handling large-scale problems. The platform offers seamless integration with numerous solvers, both commercial and open-source, providing users with the flexibility to choose the most appropriate solver for their specific needs. AMPL is available across multiple operating systems, including Windows, macOS, and Linux, and offers various licensing options.
    Starting Price: $3,000 per year
  • 15
    Wasp

    Wasp

    Wasp, Inc.

    Wasp is a full-stack web application framework that allows developers to build apps faster with less boilerplate code. It integrates React for frontend development, Node.js for backend, and Prisma for database management, enabling developers to focus on the essential parts of their app. The framework’s declarative syntax and simplified configuration mean that developers can describe their app's high-level structure in a .wasp file, and the system automatically handles much of the repetitive work, including routing, authentication, and API management. Wasp's goal is to simplify app development without sacrificing flexibility, making it ideal for building MVPs and production-ready applications.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 16
    EditRocket

    EditRocket

    EditRocket

    ​EditRocket is a comprehensive text and source code editor, offering a suite of XML editing tools designed to enhance productivity and ease of use. Its XML Validator allows users to check the syntax of XML files and validate them against schemas when the "check schema" option is selected. The XML Tag Navigator parses the editor's content, displaying XML tags in a clickable list that directs users to the corresponding tag locations within the document. The XML Sidekick provides tabs for coding inserts, tools, utilities, and the XML Tag Navigator, enabling quick insertion of XML constructs via buttons or customizable keyboard shortcuts. Additionally, EditRocket features XML Tag Completion, automatically inserting closing tags after typing an opening tag, with a configurable completion delay. Beyond XML-specific functionalities, EditRocket supports syntax highlighting for over 20 programming languages, and offers coding sidekicks and code builders.
    Starting Price: $42.95 per 2 years
  • 17
    JSONedit

    JSONedit

    tomeko.net

    JSONedit is a lightweight, portable JSON editor that offers text, tree, and list views for efficient data visualization and manipulation. It is a standalone executable of approximately 2 MB, requiring no installation and storing settings in a .ini file within its directory. Key features include syntax highlighting, tree reuse for maintaining node expansion states between sessions, drag-and-drop functionality for node movement, and tools for array manipulation such as cloning and CSV import. Users can reformat JSON data between compact and indented styles, search within text and tree views, and validate JSON syntax. JSONedit is freeware, allowing free use and distribution.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 18
    JSON Crack

    JSON Crack

    ToDiagram

    ​JSON Crack is an open source tool that transforms complex data formats, including JSON, YAML, CSV, XML, and TOML, into interactive, visually intuitive graphs, enhancing data comprehension and analysis. Users can input data directly, upload files, or provide URLs, and it automatically generates a visual tree graph. It supports data conversion between formats, such as JSON to CSV or XML to JSON, and includes features like JSON formatting, validation, and code generation for TypeScript interfaces, Golang structs, and JSON Schemas. Advanced tools are available for decoding JWTs, executing JQ queries, and performing JSON Path commands. Users can export visualizations as PNG, JPEG, or SVG files. All data processing occurs locally on the user's device, ensuring data privacy. ​
    Starting Price: Free
  • 19
    Thunder Client

    Thunder Client

    Thunder Client

    ​Thunder Client is a lightweight REST API client extension for Visual Studio Code, designed to simplify API testing with an intuitive and user-friendly interface. It supports features such as collections, environment variables, and scriptless testing, allowing developers to organize requests, manage different environments, and validate API responses without the need for scripting. All data is stored locally on the user's device, ensuring privacy and security. Additionally, Thunder Client offers Git synchronization for team collaboration, enabling the saving and sharing of request data within a Git repository. Its CLI supports CI/CD integration, facilitating automated testing and report generation. Trusted by over 5 million users worldwide, Thunder Client seamlessly integrates into the VS Code environment, providing a streamlined workflow for API development and testing. ​
    Starting Price: $3 per month
  • 20
    BullMQ

    BullMQ

    Taskforce.sh

    ​BullMQ is a Node.js library that implements a fast and robust queue system built on top of Redis, designed to address various challenges in modern microservices architectures. It is structured around four primary classes. BullMQ offers features like minimal CPU usage due to a polling-free design, distributed job execution based on Redis, support for both LIFO and FIFO jobs, job priorities, delayed and scheduled jobs according to cron specifications, automatic retries of failed jobs, concurrency settings per worker, sandboxed processing functions, automatic recovery from process crashes, and parent-child job dependencies. These capabilities make BullMQ a powerful tool for building scalable and reliable job processing systems in Node.js applications.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 21
    Base UI
    From the creators of Radix, Material UI, and Floating UI, Base UI is an unstyled React component library for building accessible user interfaces. Our focus is on accessibility, performance, and developer experience. Our goal is to provide a complete set of open-source UI components, with a delightful developer experience, in a sustainable way. Features: - Headless: Base UI components are unstyled, don’t bundle CSS, and don’t prescribe a styling solution. - Accessible: Poor accessibility can make your application difficult to navigate for all users, not just for users with disabilities. - Composable: Component APIs are fully open, so you have direct access to each node, you can easily add or remove parts, and you can wrap them however you prefer.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 22
    PostPilot

    PostPilot

    PostPilot.dev

    🚀 PostPilot – Your Private Workspace for APIs, Databases & Data Inspection PostPilot combines an API client, database client, and data inspector into one streamlined, local-first interface. Use Variables to link requests and organize everything in reusable Collections — fully local, fully private. ⚙️ How PostPilot Streamlines Your Development Workflow PostPilot combines three core tasks into one lightweight, local app: - API Testing: Send REST/GraphQL requests, inspect responses, and extract data. - Database Querying: Connect to your local or remote DBs and run SQL queries. - Data Inspection: Load JSON/XML, run queries, and debug data fast. All with: - Connection via Variables: Easily reuse variables across requests, queries, and scripts. - Manage requests in Collections: Save and reuse requests anytime - Private Workspace: Your data stays local. No cloud sync, no tracking.
    Starting Price: $40 one-time-payment
  • 23
    Forgejo

    Forgejo

    Forgejo

    Forgejo is a self-hosted, lightweight software forge designed to be easy to install and low maintenance, providing a familiar environment for GitHub users seeking to transition to a platform they own. It offers simple software project management with features like Git repository hosting, issue tracking, pull requests, wikis, and kanban boards to coordinate with your team. Forgejo includes a built-in continuous integration system called Forgejo Actions, which allows automation directly from the repository. It is customizable, supports organizations and team permissions, uses LDAP, OAuth, and more. Forgejo is privacy-focused, with no tracking, and is built to be lightweight and performant, requiring significantly fewer resources than other forges. It is 100% free, and it is developed and maintained by an inclusive community under the umbrella of Codeberg e.V., a democratic non-profit organization.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 24
    OneDev

    OneDev

    OneDev

    OneDev is an open-source, self-hosted DevOps platform that unifies Git repository management, CI/CD pipelines, issue tracking, kanban boards, and package registries into a single application. It offers an intuitive GUI for creating CI/CD jobs with features like typed parameters, matrix jobs, logic reuse, and cache management. OneDev includes built-in registries for Docker, NPM, Maven, NuGet, PyPi, and more, facilitating comprehensive package management. It supports progressive and iterative issue tracking through iterations, enhancing agile workflows. With out-of-the-box code search and navigation, Renovate integration for dependency updates, and a RESTful API, OneDev streamlines development processes. It is designed for easy installation and maintenance, providing high performance and scalability. OneDev is developed and maintained by an inclusive community, ensuring continuous improvements and support.
    Starting Price: $6 per month
  • 25
    sourcehut

    sourcehut

    sourcehut

    SourceHut is a suite of open source tools designed for efficient software development, offering Git and Mercurial hosting, mailing lists, bug tracking, continuous integration, and more. It emphasizes privacy and simplicity, featuring no tracking or advertising, and ensuring all functionalities operate without JavaScript. Users can manage public, private, and "unlisted" repositories with fine-grained access control, including options for users without accounts. SourceHut's continuous integration system supports fully virtualized builds on various Linux distributions and BSDs, allowing for ad-hoc job submissions without pushing to repositories, and provides post-build triggers for email and webhooks. It also includes mailing lists with web-based patch review tools and searchable archives, focused ticket tracking for actionable tasks, and hosted real-time chat services via IRC.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 26
    Processing

    Processing

    Processing

    Processing is a flexible software sketchbook and a language for learning how to code within the context of the visual arts. It was created to make it easier to develop visually oriented applications with an emphasis on animation and providing users with instant feedback through interaction. The developers wanted a means to “sketch” ideas in code. As its capabilities have expanded over the past decade, Processing has come to be used for more advanced production-level work in addition to its sketching role. The Processing software is used by thousands of visual designers, artists, and architects to create their works. Processing is used to create projected stage designs for dance and music performances; to generate images for music videos and film; to export images for posters, magazines, and books; and to create interactive installations in galleries, in museums, and on the street.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 27
    Bazel

    Bazel

    Bazel

    Bazel is an open-source build and test tool designed for multi-language, multi-platform software projects that delivers fast, incremental builds by rebuilding only what’s necessary and leveraging advanced local and remote caching, optimized dependency analysis, and parallel execution. It natively supports Java, C++, Go, Android, iOS, and many other languages, scaling seamlessly from small repositories to massive monorepos and complex Continuous Integration environments. Its declarative extension language lets teams add or customize rules for new languages and platforms, tapping into a growing community ecosystem. Bazel offers query capabilities to inspect and understand dependency graphs, comprehensive versioned documentation and release notes, and robust support via GitHub, Slack, and monthly community updates. Trusted by industry leaders like Google, Stripe, and Dropbox to build heavy-duty, mission-critical infrastructure and applications.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 28
    distcc

    distcc

    distcc

    Distcc is a distributed compilation system that accelerates C, C++, Objective-C, and Fortran builds by offloading compile jobs across multiple networked machines. It integrates seamlessly with GCC and Clang toolchains, transparently intercepting compiler calls and redistributing them to remote daemons while preserving optimization flags, include paths, and dependency tracking. Its client-server architecture features a lightweight listener that manages job queues, prioritizes local compilation when needed, and automatically detects available hosts via simple configuration or DNS. Distcc supports cross-compilation environments, SSH tunneling for secure clusters, blacklisting of unreliable servers, and integration with build systems like Make, CMake and Ninja. Monitoring tools provide real-time statistics on job distribution and throughput, and compatibility with compilation databases (compdb) enables granular control over distributed workloads.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 29
    Kiro

    Kiro

    Amazon Web Services

    Kiro is an AI‑powered integrated development environment that brings structure to AI‑driven coding by converting natural‑language prompts into clear requirements, system designs, and discrete implementation tasks validated by robust tests. Built from the ground up for agentic workflows, it features spec‑driven development, multimodal chat, “agent hooks” that trigger background tasks on events like file saves, and an autopilot mode that autonomously runs large scripts while keeping you in control. With smart context management, Kiro reduces repetitive prompts and helps implement complex features across large codebases. Native MCP integrations let you connect to documentation, databases, and APIs, and you can guide development with images of UI designs or architecture diagrams. Enterprise‑grade security and privacy ensure safe deployment, while support for Claude Sonnet models, Open VSX plugins, and existing VS Code settings delivers a familiar yet AI‑supercharged experience.
    Starting Price: $19 per month
  • 30
    Void Editor

    Void Editor

    Void Editor

    Void is an open source AI code editor and Cursor alternative built as a fork of VS Code, enabling developers to write code with advanced AI assistance while retaining full control over their data. It supports seamless integration with any large language model, such as DeepSeek, Llama, Qwen, Gemini, Claude, and Grok, connecting directly without routing through a private backend. Core features include tab‑triggered autocomplete, inline quick edit, and a versatile AI chat interface offering normal chat, a restricted gather mode for read/search-only tasks, and an agent mode that automates file and folder operations, terminal commands, and MCP tool access. Void delivers high‑performance operations, including fast apply on files with thousands of lines, alongside checkpoint management for model updates, native tool execution, and lint error detection. Developers can transfer all themes, keybindings, and settings from VS Code in one click and host models locally or via the cloud.
    Starting Price: Free