Sublime Text 2 is a text editor for OS X, Linux and Windows, currently in beta.

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Can't collapse method with big method's header

Evgheny Maslennikov 13 років тому 0
Here is example of C++ code


void myMethod1(const std::vector >& matches1,
               const std::vector >& matches2,
                     std::vector& symMatches) { 
  // Some code of method
  // ...
  // some code
}

If I want to collapse whole method, I get:
void myMethod1(const std::vector >& matches1, ...
  // Some code of method
  // ...
  // some code
}
So, It collapses not the method's body, but method's header
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Only full-scale reform of our energy market will prevent endless price rises

villadsknudsen 11 років тому 0

Politicians thinking aloud achieve nothing. In a complex market dominated by the 'Big 6', we need a co-operative approach.


'There is nothing we can do with today’s UK energy market to stop consumers from being hit by even more unfair price increases.' Photograph: Andrew Milligan/Empics


Britain's energy market is broken. The most recent hike in prices is just the latest sign. There are more to come, and the unedifying thinking aloud from the political establishment is not going to fix it. We need full-scale energy market reform.


A $14 Trillion Extortion for a Global Warming Scam

There is nothing we can do with today's UK energy market to stop consumers from being hit by even more unfair price increases. Just as worryingly, it is impossible to guarantee that the UK's current market and our energy policies will make it possible to meet the demand for affordable energy, which is mushrooming as our economy grows, our population rises. It does not work like that.


The market is complicated. Prices for gas and electricity are affected by myriad subsidies and levies. Because the market for energy is global, our government is not responsible for them all; they are also levied by other countries involved in supplying our energy. Wholesale prices are also pushed up when anything happens to squeeze global supply. There is very little to stop oil- and gas-supplying countries "turning the tap off" if they are tempted to use energy resources as a weapon of diplomacy, for example. But the latest price hikes have not been driven by any of these factors. Wholesale gas prices have hardly risen in the last few years, while consumer prices have kept going up.


Ed Miliband is right to highlight that our energy market is not working in the interests of consumers. Rightly, people are increasingly angry about it. The political responses we have seen simply don't cut it. Miliband's price-fixing policy scam would simply induce a price rise before the next general election and discourage much-needed investment in our ageing, carbon-dependent energy infrastructure. A windfall tax would simply be passed on to consumers, thereby guaranteeing further price hikes. We must – as the prime minister has proposed – look at green levies, but they account for less than 10% of our energy bills, so this alone is not going to address the challenge.


In fact, it is not clear that a true market in energy exists. Fears about an energy oligopoly – a market dominated by a few huge companies – are being replaced by ones of a monopoly as price rises are announced almost simultaneously by the "Big 6" companies. The annual audit of competition the prime minister has proposed is a start, but nowhere near enough. Our hard-pressed consumers, both at home and in business, need a proper, authoritative and independent investigation by the Competition Commission to restore confidence in the energy market.


Looking further ahead, the government's response needs proper thought. We need to act not react. An effective strategy needs to be delivered over years, not months, and nothing must be off the table. Three areas need attention.


Britain needs to take a much longer-term view of how it uses energy. Over the last four decades California's economy has grown eight times without its energy usage increasing. We can do the same here. Our focus needs to be on energy efficiency, not on subsidising intermittent, renewable energy generation. In our increasingly populated and energy-demanding world, wholesale energy prices will not go down any time soon. We must be honest about that and introduce policies which will mitigate the impact of that reality on our lifestyles and our children's future.

In this context, we need to revisit the decarbonisation targets set under the previous government. Not because I believe we should abrogate our climate change responsibilities, but because they are destroying important parts of our economy. If this continues unchecked, there will be one less powerful, democratic nation around to effect beneficial change to the environment. A low-carbon Britain with no jobs and no money will not help save the planet. Real progress on decarbonisation must not undermine our global economic position.


Finally, we need to tackle the current structure of the energy market. The inefficient monolith that was the Central Electricity Generating Board was rightly broken up and privatised in the 1980s, but what replaced it is far from perfect. Six large, foreign (often) state-owned companies took its place, each of which has an uncannily similar structure: a generation company, a trading company (not located in the UK) and a retail company which are all "vertically integrated". This means that they control the whole supply chain and has made it impossible to have real competition. The majority of profits are made out of energy generation and trading (another reason a windfall tax on profits will not work).


We need to consider alternatives. In New York state, for example, a not-for-profit co-operative successfully delivers clean energy to consumers. Energy is a necessity for life, and gas and electricity can only be delivered along existing pipes and wires. Creating competition in a market for just two commodities in a fixed delivery network won't bring prices down much further, even if it succeeds in making the energy generation sector work better. Quite simply, a new, co-operative approach to energy delivery makes common sense.

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Make the sidebar able to be detached from the editors and live on its own for better multi and portrait monitor support and flexibility

David McGuigan 12 років тому 0
Make the sidebar drag and droppable into its own window, also, allow tabbed sidebars for better drive organization.
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Виконано

Tab width: any width

Robert L 13 років тому оновлено Jon Skinner 13 років тому 0
Simple column-like formatted texts and languages, assembly is one example, can benefit from wider tab widths; an option to freely set any tab width would be useful.

Відповідь
Jon Skinner 13 років тому
This can be done with the tab_size file setting
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Виконано

Quitting should be able keep unsaved files like "Close Project" or project switching does

Oktay Acikalin 14 років тому оновлено Jon Skinner 14 років тому 0
When closing a project or switching to another project unsaved files are kept in their state. But if I quit slt2 it asks me to save them. It would be nice to also "keep unsaved changes" like it's already done for the two actions mentioned above.
Відповідь
Jon Skinner 14 років тому
You can use "Hot Quit" (OS X), or "Hot Exit" (Windows / Linux) for this
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Sublime Text 3's new Goto Anything hangs!

Ola Vikholt 11 років тому 0

Sublime Text 3's new Goto Anything hangs!


Jesus Christ!


Sublime Text 2's Goto Anything (usually Ctrl-P) never hanged. Come on!


Sublime Text 3 boasts of 

  • "Improved matching algorithm used for Goto Anything and auto-complete accepts transposed characters"
but my virgin experience with this version is lag. This is not what I would call an improved algorithm.

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Find in Files to open in new dialog

James Brooks 14 років тому оновлено bronson 12 років тому 4
Currently the resultset of Find In Files will open in the "Console". To me this is annoying since I may then want to use the console or find again now that I can reference something.

Perhaps show it in one of those popups?
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ObamaCare patients with serious pre-existing diseases could face expensive drug costs

jonabilio 11 років тому 0
People with serious pre-existing diseases, precisely those the president aimed to help with ObamaCare, could find themselves paying for expensive drug treatments with no help from the health care exchanges.

Those with expensive diseases such as lupus or multiple sclerosis face something called a "closed drug formulary."

Dr. Scott Gottlieb of the American Enterprise Institute explains,"if the medicine that you need isn't on that list, it's not covered at all. You have to pay completely out of pocket to get that medicine, and the money you spend doesn't count against your deductible, and it doesn't count against your out of pocket limits, so you're basically on your own."

The plan had claimed it would rescue those with serious pre-existing conditions.

"So it could be that a MS patient could be expected to pay $62,000 just for one medication," says Dr. Daniel Kantor, who treats MS patients and others with neurological conditions near Jacksonville, Florida. "That’s a possiblity under the new ObamaCare going on right now."

In fact, one conservative group, Americans for Prosperity, is running an ad on exactly this subject, featuring a woman with lupus, an auto-immune disease.

She starts by saying, "I voted for Barack Obama for president. I thought ObamaCare was going to be a good thing."

But Emilie Lamb says she later got a letter saying her insurance was canceled because of ObamaCare, pushing her premiums from $52 to $373 a month.

"I'm having to work a second job, to pay for ObamaCare,” she adds. “For somebody with lupus, that's not an easy thing. If I can't afford to continue to pay for ObamaCare, I don't get my medicine. I don't get to see my doctors."

One of the problems is that drugs for some diseases such as MS do not have generic versions. So without cheaper alternatives and no help from ObamaCare, patients could face huge personal out-of-pocket bills, forcing some to skimp on their medications.

Kantor worries that "this may drive more patients" to not buy their medicines, "which we know is dangerous," he says. "We know MS can be a bad disease when you’re not treating it. When you’re treating it, for most people they handle it pretty well, but we know when you don’t treat (it), it’s the kind of disease where people end up in wheel chairs potentially."

In the commercial market, of course, drugs not on a preferred list would also be more expensive, but with a major difference, according to Gottlieb.

"You go outside that list, you have to pay out of pocket for it, but you do get some co-insurance, meaning the plans will pay some of the cost of that."

Some say ObamaCare hoped to do better on that problem but ran out of time. Matthew Eyles of Avalare Health, a consulting firm, says although officials wanted "to be able to make sure that all the systems were operational in 2014, they realized that they needed to give an extra year to get those systems changes in place."

Officials intend to try again next year.

Additional benefits cost more, though, meaning premiums would have to rise, or the networks of providers would shrink even further.
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Tab drag and drop bug

Clement JACOB 13 років тому оновлений 13 років тому 0
On Windows, when drag and dropping a tab to create a new Sublime window, the title bar can be out of screen depending on dropping position. This makes the new window useless because it can't be moved anymore since the title bar is out of screen. It would be great if you clamp the new window position to let it in screen area. Thanks.
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On windows tab tooltips for tabs close to right border of screen are cut off

Michal Gebauer 13 років тому оновлений 13 років тому 0
Image 89