Console with ch_DE Keyboard is mapped onto ctrl+<
On Mac OSX Lion and with a ch_DE keyboard layout, the console is mapped onto ctrl+< instead of ctrl+`.
This is actually the better keymap for ch_DE keyboard layouts but it should be reflected in the docs and the mnemonic in view->show console.
- Michael
Know your health insurance vocabulary, The Koyal Group Insurance Fraud Certified
A recent meeting with a client reminded me that while the vocabulary of our industry may be second nature to those of us in the industry, it may feel like a foreign language, creating the first barrier to understanding, for those of you trying to navigate the health insurance arena. Therefore, today we will offer a user-friendly listing of the terms you may encounter.
PREMIUM – The money you pay to have an insurance product. Similar to when you check out at the grocery store and pay for your sacks of groceries, premium is what you pay for the product you purchased.
DEDUCTIBLE – Deductible is the amount of money you will pay out of your pocket before the health insurance plan starts to pay. Deductibles can vary by carrier, and plan. The Medicare Part A (Hospital coverage) deductible in 2014 is $1,216 per benefit period. The Medicare Part B (Medical IE: Doctor appointments etc) deductible in 2014 is $147 per year. If your current health insurance is through an employer, you may have a deductible as low as $250 or as high as $5,000. Most deductibles these days are per calendar year.
COBRA - Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) is a federal law that may allow you to temporarily keep health coverage after your employment ends, you lose coverage as a dependent of the covered employee, or another qualifying event. If you elect COBRA coverage, you pay 100 percent of the premiums, including the share the employer used to pay, plus an administrative fee.
CO-PAY – (Copayment) - An amount you may be required to pay as your share of the cost for a medical service or supply, like a doctor's visit, hospital outpatient visit, or prescription drug. A copayment is usually a set amount, rather than a percentage. For example, you might pay $10 or $20 for a doctor's visit or prescription.
COINSURANCE - An amount you may be required to pay as your share of the cost for services after you pay any deductibles. Coinsurance is usually a percentage (for example, 20 percent).
EOB – Explanation of Benefits. The Explanation of Benefits (EOB) is the insurance company’s written explanation regarding a claim, showing what they paid and what the client must pay. The document is sometimes accompanied by a benefits check.
MSN – Medicare Summary Notice. Medicare Summary Notice (MSN) A notice you get after the doctor or provider files a claim for Part A or Part B services in Original Medicare. It explains what the doctor or provider billed for, the Medicare-approved amount, how much Medicare paid, and what you must pay. It is the same concept as an EOB, but is the notice you receive from Medicare.
COVERAGE GAP – relative to Medicare Part D (also known as the "Donut Hole") A period of time in which you pay higher cost sharing for prescription drugs until you spend enough to qualify for catastrophic coverage. The coverage gap (also called the "donut hole") starts when you and your plan have paid a set dollar amount for prescription drugs during that year.
PRIOR AUTHORIZATION – The definition from the Medicare website for this term reads as follows: approval that you must get from a Medicare drug plan before you fill your prescription in order for the prescription to be covered by your plan. Your Medicare drug plan may require prior authorization for certain drugs. However, from a non-Medicare insurance site we see the following definition: Prior authorization is a decision by your health insurer or plan that a health-care service, treatment plan, prescription drug, or durable medical equipment is medically necessary. Sometimes called pre-authorization, prior approval, or pre-certification. Your health insurance or plan may require prior authorization for certain services before you receive them, except in an emergency. Prior authorization isn’t a promise your health insurance or plan will cover the cost.
Abandon scroll when mouse moves away from scrollbar
Steps to reproduce:
1. Open a file with enough lines to allow vertical scrolling
2. Drag the scroll thumb up or down to scroll
3. While still holding the mouse button down, move the mouse left away from the scroll bar
Expected behaviour: the scroll should be abandoned and the view position of the file should revert to where it was before the scroll was started
Actual behaviour: the scroll is not affected
It's common in most other apps (on windows at least) to be able to scroll to view content off-screen and then move away from the scroll bar to revert to the initial position. This prevents the user from needing to search for their initial position (frustrating!).
Thanks for your consideration!
Road to Wellness Less Travelled by Jennifer Shearin Group Wellness Coaching
Jennifer Shearin provides a valuable list of how one can attain wellness, and, it follows, a long and happy life. She does not tell her readers to do all, of course. One only has to choose those that fit one’s budget and other conveniences in life.
Read full article: http://terri-gaines.newsvine.com/_news/2014/02/26/22883179-road-to-wellness-less-travelled-by-jennifer-shearin-group-wellness-coaching
To join conversations about having a healthy, happy and long life, visit http://ellislab.com/forums/viewthread/242809/
Related Topics:
About Jennifer Shearin Group Wellness Coaching
Jennifer Shearin Integrative Health Coaching
Jennifer Shearin Group Wellness Coaching
focus next/previous group
Switch Project in Window hangs until Mouse is moved
Ctrl+P @ shouldn't find /* foo() */ in C or C++
I have a function() inside the docblock. Ctrl+P @ should ignore it.
Nobody answer on the forum at bugs request so i`m sad for that...
1) appear some hidden copy code from the last part of string.
2) On del key press text are deleted weird...
I use last Dev Build on Win 7 x86
I cant install sublime in linux
When i try to install sublime on gnu/linux Ubuntu 15.04 installing process break and stop and show me following error :
$ python sublime_plugin.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "sublime_plugin.py", line 4, in <module>
import sublime
ImportError: No module named sublime
how to find a filename??
and i think there are no function about find a filename. right?
what i really wanna do is to find some keyword in a specific file.
and there are many file name,, such as
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <debug.h>
#include <nuttx/arch.h>
#include <nuttx/compiler.h>
#include <nuttx/fs/fs.h>
#include <nuttx/net/net.h>
#include <nuttx/lib.h>
#include <nuttx/kmalloc.h>
#include <nuttx/init.h>
#include "os_internal.h"
#include "sig_internal.h"
#include "wd_internal.h"
#include "sem_internal.h"
#ifndef CONFIG_DISABLE_MQUEUE
# include "mq_internal.h"
#endif
#ifndef CONFIG_DISABLE_PTHREAD
# include "pthread_internal.h"
#endif
#include "clock_internal.h"
#include "timer_internal.h"
#include "irq_internal.h"
#ifdef HAVE_TASK_GROUP
#include "group_internal.h"
#endif
so if i wanna find some word,
i open the explorer and i search the types.h and then open it. and i search the stdbool.h and then open it.... repeat all the things and then i search that keyword in open files...
so,,, at least what i want is to search the filename in sublime text...
or could i make that package if i study the sublime text? plz help!!! :(
Support references to other defined colors in color scheme files
auto close tags
When typing HTML code in quotes in PHP(and I guess it occurs in other languages as well), it doesn't properly close the tags:
<html>
<?php
echo "<p></html>"
(it should close as "</p>").
I suggest auto_close_tags should be turned off in quotes until it gets fixed, because this bug is really annoying.
Thanks!
The Carlyle Group Industry Expertise
Open files from the Goto Anything panel next to the current tab, instead of at the end.
After you select it from the dropdown list, the View opens right next to the Controller tab (the one you were working on), instead of being opened as the last tab.
When Your Life Needs a Do-Over
“Mastering the Art of Quitting: Why It Matters in Life, Love, and Work,” by Peg Streep and Alan Bernstein. Da Capo Lifelong Books, $24.99, 272 pp.
“Reset: How to Beat the Job-Loss Blues and Get Ready for Your Next Act,” by Dwain Schenck. Da Capo Lifelong Books, $16.99, 272 pp.
“Fail Fast, Fail Often: How Losing Can Help You Win,” by Ryan Babineaux, Ph.D., and John Krumboltz, Ph.D. Tarcher/Penguin, $15.95, 224 pp.
As 2014 looms, if you’re centering your New Year’s resolutions on things like exercising, improving your self-discipline and communicating better with loved ones, but ignoring trouble spots where drastic action is needed (like quitting a dead-end job or ending a doomed relationship), you are not alone.
According to the authors Peg Streep and Alan Bernstein: “American mythology doesn’t have room for quitters. In fact, the only kind of giving up we collectively accept and support is quitting a bad habit like smoking or drinking.”
But in “Mastering the Art of Quitting,” they argue that the national tendency to stay the course, however off-track, is misguided. They urge Americans afflicted by the “myth of persistence” to abandon “the hopeless pursuit of the unattainable” and to build better goals.
Shrewd, detailed and exhortatory, their book breaks down obstacles to quitting, illustrated by exemplary stories of men and women who had the courage to gracefully quit jobs that did not satisfy them.
One excellent reason to master the art of quitting is to avoid being fired. In March 2012, Dwain Schenck, a longtime communications executive, lost a job he hated and found himself depressed and panicked.
“Reset: How to Beat the Job-Loss Blues and Get Ready for Your Next Act” is his blow-by-blow memoir of his struggle to restore his fortunes (today he runs a profitable public relations consultancy). “Fear quickly started to eat at me,” he writes. His “sense of identity was shot,” his psyche was “crushed.”
Had Mr. Schenck been able to read Ms. Streep’s and Mr. Bernstein’s book at that time, he would have seen that his problem is shared by thousands in this turbulent economy. It was, in fact, the identical plight of the first case study in “Mastering the Art of Quitting,” a lawyer named Jennifer who wasted months trying to please a hostile new boss. When she was dismissed all the same, she took her expertise to a nonprofit organization, where her contributions are valued.
Another new book, “Fail Fast, Fail Often,” by the Stanford psychologists Ryan Babineaux and John Krumboltz, argues for an even more proactive approach to self-invention, encouraging those who are contemplating a new beginning to kick-start their dreams — even if it takes more than a few tries to get the motor revving.
Rather than focusing on how to quit the wrong job, the authors encourage readers to invent a job that brings them joy, and to throw out the old career-advice books that instructed entrepreneurs to construct elaborate five-year plans, or urged job seekers to take career evaluation tests to find work that harmonized with their interests or star signs.
“It is time for the madness to end!” they declare. “The world is evolving and new careers are available all the time.”
And if you don’t find a business where you want to work, they suggest, create one; don’t overthink it, start small and correct flaws once you’re up and running, because “Successful people take action as quickly as possible even though they may perform badly.”
Their assumption is that (like Ed Catmull, a founder and president of Pixar; or Jack Dorsey, the founding chief executive of Twitter; or Howard Schultz, creator of Starbucks) successful employees and entrepreneurs will be adept at the magical process that prevails at Pixar (by Mr. Catmull’s description). That, the authors say, consists of winnowing “a few good ideas” out of “tons of half-baked concepts and outright stinkers.”
Bold, bossy and bracing, “Fail Fast, Fail Often” is like a 200-page shot of B12, meant to energize the listless job seeker.
That said, if you have a mortgage and school tuition to pay, the freewheeling turn-on-a-dime initiative the authors espouse may leave the timid hugging their cubicles, penning cautious resolutions to cut down on pasta and cheese in the coming year, and smiling ingratiatingly at any supervisors who pass by.
"Switch Project" should have the same submenu as "Open Recent"
"Switch Project" should have the same submenu as "Open Recent".
Install language definition in "json-tmlanguage" file
wordwrap just comments
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