Sublime Text 2 is a text editor for OS X, Linux and Windows, currently in beta.
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-1
Double-clicking a file in project opens it and then focuses on the next file in list
I've noticed since 2041 when you double-click a file to open it, the tabs opens but then a preview of the file above it opens (because the new file is added to the group in the sidebar and all items are moved down by 1)
Not all the time, but the majority of.
Not all the time, but the majority of.
-1
Mouse buttons can't be captured by external applications (SmartScroll + Wacom Tablet)
I use Sublime on Mac in junction with Wacom tablet and SmartScroll app. I use middle "mouse button" on the pen to grab and scroll. Though the mouse buttons are now customizeable, it is impossible to capture mouse events from outside Sublime. I have seen a lot of frustrated discussions about this on the internet.
-1
Goto anything action cannot be cancelled with esc
Windows 7 64bit
Sublime Text 2 version 20110203
Steps:
0. Have a file open
1. Press Ctrl+P
2. type something (until editor focuses some other file)
3. Press esc to return to the first file
Expected outcome:
- Editor focuses the first file
Actual outcome:
- Pressing esc has no effect and mouse needs to be used to return to the first file
Sublime Text 2 version 20110203
Steps:
0. Have a file open
1. Press Ctrl+P
2. type something (until editor focuses some other file)
3. Press esc to return to the first file
Expected outcome:
- Editor focuses the first file
Actual outcome:
- Pressing esc has no effect and mouse needs to be used to return to the first file
-1
Is it possible to adjust the content to the windows size, making horizontal scrollbar disappear?
For example, in editors such as Coda or Espresso, the content adjusts itself depending on the size of the window, so that there isn't an horizontal scrollbar. Especially useful when you need to resize the window you're working in.
-1
Show open files in sidebar
I tend to keep a lot of files open at once (often 10 or more), and this makes it difficult to read the filenames in the tabs.
It would be nice to be able to show the open files in the sidebar, or at least have some way of listing them vertically (as opposed to horizontally) so that the filenames don't have to be truncated.
If they are in the sidebar, there will have to be a way to separate them from the folder view, of course. Maybe the open file list could go above the folder view?
-1
Videobash | Jennifer Shearin Group Wellness Coaching - Road to Wellness Less Travelled
With
the upsurge of the wellness industry in the past thirty years, more and more
people are living well-balanced and active lives. And as the essential medical
knowledge and practices improve even more, we can look forward to more people
living up to a hundred years or more, something which was apparently a common
thing in ancient times. In certain parts of the world, such as Thailand, Spain,
Japan, France and the US, where we can find the most number of centenarians,
dietary and lifestyle habits are commonly investigated and emulated as
effective means of achieving not just long-life but for maintaining a sense of
well-being.
If it was such a common thing for people to live up to a hundred or even much longer in ancient times, how come modern people no longer approach that level of physiological durability? We are more of an exception now rather than the rule in biological longevity. Sea turtles, swans and carps and some other animals have longer average life spans than us humans. And they do not even read bibles and blogs!
But we should not despair as life is, as often said, not measured in the length of one’s life but in the quality of life that one has. What human can survive living in water as tortoises and carps do? Yet the quality of life, not just the length of it, can now be attained through observing certain basic health tips and lifestyle changes any person can do without having to spend so much. And one need not reside in Okinawa or in Nepal to achieve this.
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.
Take, for instance; tip # 45 on taking up yoga. Yoga, admittedly, has so many health benefits. But such benefits can only be attained through some rigorous body exercises unique to yoga. Here is where many people feel challenged, especially the aged and the physically disabled? What then? As suggested, one must look for other alternatives while trying to achieve the same health benefits.
Certain ancient Chinese breathing exercises are known to provide rejuvenation of internal organs through slow, meditative deep-breathing routines. Almost any person of any age and even with disabilities can practice them. Perhaps, certain body movements, just as certain expensive foods are inaccessible to most people, are not meant for everyone. But there are certainly other ways to get the health benefits through some other means.
And with 74 ways to choose from, Jennifer Shearin has certainly covered most bases when it comes to having a healthy, happy and long life. For that, we can only thank her.
Click here to watch video of Jennifer Shearin Group Wellness Coaching - Road to Wellness Less Travelled.
To join conversations about having a healthy, happy and long life, visit http://ellislab.com/forums/viewthread/242809/
If it was such a common thing for people to live up to a hundred or even much longer in ancient times, how come modern people no longer approach that level of physiological durability? We are more of an exception now rather than the rule in biological longevity. Sea turtles, swans and carps and some other animals have longer average life spans than us humans. And they do not even read bibles and blogs!
But we should not despair as life is, as often said, not measured in the length of one’s life but in the quality of life that one has. What human can survive living in water as tortoises and carps do? Yet the quality of life, not just the length of it, can now be attained through observing certain basic health tips and lifestyle changes any person can do without having to spend so much. And one need not reside in Okinawa or in Nepal to achieve this.
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.
Take, for instance; tip # 45 on taking up yoga. Yoga, admittedly, has so many health benefits. But such benefits can only be attained through some rigorous body exercises unique to yoga. Here is where many people feel challenged, especially the aged and the physically disabled? What then? As suggested, one must look for other alternatives while trying to achieve the same health benefits.
Certain ancient Chinese breathing exercises are known to provide rejuvenation of internal organs through slow, meditative deep-breathing routines. Almost any person of any age and even with disabilities can practice them. Perhaps, certain body movements, just as certain expensive foods are inaccessible to most people, are not meant for everyone. But there are certainly other ways to get the health benefits through some other means.
And with 74 ways to choose from, Jennifer Shearin has certainly covered most bases when it comes to having a healthy, happy and long life. For that, we can only thank her.
Click here to watch video of Jennifer Shearin Group Wellness Coaching - Road to Wellness Less Travelled.
To join conversations about having a healthy, happy and long life, visit http://ellislab.com/forums/viewthread/242809/
-1
Naprawione
Latest development build breaks the CMake TMbundle
When I try to open a CMakeLists.txt file in Sublime Text 2 (dev) build 2158, I get the following errors:
end pattern with unmatched parenthesis in regex ^(?!(?=\S)
Error loading syntax file "Packages/cmake.tmbundle/Syntaxes/CMake Listfile.tmLanguage": Error in regex: end pattern with unmatched parenthesis in regex (?i)^\s*(function|macro)\s*(\(
I submit this as a bug as it occurs after upgrading to Build 2158 from 2157.
I'm running Arch Linux 64bit, using the cmake.tmbundle from textmate/cmake.tmbundle.
Edit:
I've just discovered that this occurs with all syntax packages.
Is it only affecting me?
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Documentation generation
Please consider the autogeneration of a pdf document that captures the current state of Sublime Text documentation, making it available for download, to support the use of the editor when not online. (Thanks.)
-1
Ruby build system regexp doesn't capture --from
The build system for Ruby is great, but the regexp doesn't work for all kinds of output, for example with the error code below:
/usr/local/lib/ruby/gems/1.9.1/gems/bibtex-ruby-2.0.4/lib/bibtex/entry.rb:282:in `method_missing': undefined method `BibTeX' for #<BibTeX::Entry:0x00000101190170> (NoMethodError)from /Users/Stian/src/folders2web/bibtex-cleanup.rb:36:in `<main>'
F4 correctly picks up the first error, and goes to the right file/line number, but for the second line, it tries to open the file "from /Users/Stian/src/folders2web/bibtex-cleanup.rb", which obviously doesn't exist.
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