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

+1

Westhill Consulting Founder Tribal Leadership Team

Joharah Perkins fa 11 anys 0
http://monmouth.modulemedia.co.uk/careers/partners/leadership-team
Monmouth’s leadership team comprises:

Image 277
Andrew Lawrence
Andrew has worked in healthcare since 1994, first as a consultant before becoming a successful entrepreneur and seasoned Managing Director. In 2002, he founded Westhill Consulting, leading it from start-up to sale to Tribal Group plc in November 2008. He consolidated and integrated Tribal’s disparate health service capabilities, assuming full responsibility for all Tribal’s health services businesses in August 2010.


He then successfully turned around a series of faltering major contracts whilst maintaining profitability, despite prolonged market retrenchment and uncertainty. Following Capita plc’s acquisition of Tribal’s consulting businesses in April 2011, Andrew led Capita’s commissioning and clinical support business until December 2012 when he left to found Monmouth.



Image 278
Mark Duman
Mark is a rare blend of clinician, management consultant and patient advocate. He works with organisations to help them realise the full benefit of their services and products, especially through the oft untapped potential of patients and the public. At the King’s Fund he founded the Ask About Medicines campaign and published ‘Producing Patient Information’.


In the BBC he delivered a range of behaviour change initiatives to motivate people to improve their health and lifestyle. Following roles in publishing and telecoms, Mark returned to healthcare focussing on market development and patient and public engagement (PPE). He contributes to various advisory and editorial boards and is well-known for his PPE master classes to clinicians, managers, and patient groups. He is a passionate advocate for moving personalisation beyond tokenism to embrace the reality that patients and the public are very capable of shaping and delivering health care - if only we would let them.


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Mike Cooke
Mike has over 20 years’ senior experience in the NHS managing national IT systems development and data standards. He developed the National Cervical Screening and Breast Screening Programmes, was one of first people to adopt PRINCE in NHS IT development and led the internal audit and accreditation of the NHS’s national Family Health Service to the BS5750 Quality Management Standard.

As the national head of NHS Data Standards within Connecting for Health, Mike was responsible for a number of key strategic clinical coding schemes. Mike left the NHS to join Westhill in 2006 and subsequently moved on to Tribal and Capita where he was responsible for technical delivery of the NHS South Central Commissioning Support service – including the roll-out of risk stratification across a population of over 5 million patients. Mike joined Monmouth in June 2013, and leads on our Information Governance, data and service management and PbR assurance services.

The leadership team is advised by an Independent Advisory Board, whose purpose is to help ensure that Monmouth makes a strategic and useful contribution to UK healthcare. Membership includes senior clinical, academic, informatics and pharmaceutical industry expertise.


Read more: http://monmouth.modulemedia.co.uk/careers/partners/leadership-team
+1

Preview of renamed lines when renaming in multiple files

Stefan Marbury fa 12 anys 0

while renaming of words in multiple files works great it's always a bit of a mystery in which files it renamed what exactly. It would be great to have the option to preview the changes that are made and then to accept them all. Or to deselect unwanted renames and accept the remaining ones.

+1

combined 1-column and 2-grid view as layout option

Dan Crane fa 12 anys updated by Fredrik Ehnbom fa 12 anys 1

I thought it might be nice to have a layout option that combines the grid and column views so that one could have the window divided into three sections that with a top and bottom grid on one side and a full height column on the other. 

+1

Go With the Road Less Travelled

Jessa Siddins fa 11 anys 0
Image 298
Johannesburg - There are sounds, and tastes, which I will forever associate with going on holiday in southern Africa, no matter what the destination.

Like the pinging of hot metal as it cools down, with the car standing in the shade of a lonely sentinel acacia tree as the vlaktes (plains) of the Karoo wash around it; and the rushing sound of a car as it approaches the lay-by.

Then the rising and falling whine of the tyres as the car blows past and the torn silence slowly knits together again.

Bacon and egg sandwiches, accompanied by a mug of hot sweet tea. It’s the sound, and taste, of freedom, of leaving behind the concerns of house and job, and the anticipation of relaxation somewhere at the end of the road. By the time the second sandwich and second cup of tea have disappeared, I’m getting itchy, eager to be back behind the wheel.

Years ago, Nissan used to have a marketing slogan “Life’s a journey; enjoy the ride”… and this still sums up for me the thrill of a road trip.
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I love driving and I love this beautiful land of ours, where the vistas are endless and around the next corner can be a scene which takes your breath away.

As a working reporter in my youth, rather than a desk jockey, I would drive to odd places in search of stories. And, with a trusty road atlas (still has more soul than any GPS and, once you’re familiar with it, much quicker to use than the electronic gadget), I would plot back routes via different little towns. And I would wonder how a place like Boons (in the North West and little more than some towering maize silos, a garage and a general store) came by its odd-sounding name.

Each time I travelled, I would go out of my way to see something different – and would mark off each of the roads less travelled with a yellow marker pen. I continued that habit on family trips, much to the annoyance of my wife and kids, who all wanted to know “when will we be there?”

I remember one occasion, heading for somewhere in the lowveld, when even my wife’s complaints were silenced by the otherworldly stillness and peace at the top of the Steenkampsberg Pass (once listed proudly as the highest road in the then Transvaal).

The alternative routes became a necessity in the 1990s, for a young family with little cash – so we avoided the toll roads on our trips down to Durban to stay with granny and grandpa. And that trip was rewarding, especially the winding route past the Sterkfontein Dam and down the Drakensberg escarpment via the Olivershoek Pass into KwaZulu-Natal.

These days, sadly, much has changed on our rural byways. Many of the lay-bys are filthy, rubbish bins are overflowing and grass is seldom trimmed. And, with concerns about security, the appeal of a remote stop is tempered by the thought of being waylaid. We halted occasionally at a picnic spot near Sterkfontein Dam, but stopped after it became a crime mecca.

The large Ultra-Cities and One-Stops are what we frequent these days – and no bad thing either, considering they are safe, convenient and have generally well-cleaned toilets, as well as shops.

Also, many of the roads less travelled have deteriorated into well below what our president would scorn as a “road in Malawi” – filled with enormous potholes, which are not only damaging to cars but are also potential killers. Not to mention the fact that in provinces like the Free State and Mpumalanga many road signs haven’t been painted for years.

And, admittedly, we have also become a little like the lemmings who embark on the annual stampede to the coast, often blasting down to Knysna from Joburg in only one day. Stopping off at the Mountain Zebra National Park was not only sensible, but a treat – if you have been there you will know what I mean. But these days, you’ve got to book way in advance.

Yet, there are times when I still yearn to get out into the back of beyond. To experience the empty heart of South Africa, those Karoo vaults where time stands still. Where you know the next car may only come along in hours.

I was reminded of this recently when watching re-runs of The World’s best Motorcycle Rides on DsTV’s travel Channel. Presenter and biker Henry Cole headed for Cape Town from Joburg, but went via the Cradle of Humankind, Kuruman, Augrabies, Nieuwoudtville, Loeriesfontein, Calvinia and Sutherland. The scenery was stunning… and even Cole himself, who’s been all around the world on bikes, had to admit that parked on the side of the road watching an approaching thunderstorm was wondrous.

I’m getting an itchy accelerator foot again. But I am also looking for tips and advice about your “road less travelled” – those places where you feel part of a different world – because I am determined this will be the year of hitting the road. - Saturday Star


+1

Sublime Component for Delphi

Bill E fa 11 anys 0
I have an application written in Delphi that uses a syntax editor component. It would be real cool if I could use Sublime instead, meaning Sublime would run inside my application as a component.

You would definitely get sales if you did this.
+1

Pinned(binded) mode

Sergey Kovalev fa 12 anys 0

Pin window to another window or it's child window. And hide all window borders in this mode. Text editor will like it embedded in application it pinned. I think this could be gread feature.

Feature like this is present in Notepad++ but it does not follow parent. It just pin to screen.

+1

Vintage: `c<motion>` should yank the deleted text

Trent Ogren fa 13 anys 0
`dw` and `yw` both yank the word into the register just like Vim.  `cw`, however, does not.  Can you please fix this?

Thanks for Vintage!  It rocks my socks off!
+1

Scroll position is not preserved when file is modified outside the editor

pazsxn fa 12 anys actualitzat fa 12 anys 0

To reproduce:

  1. Open a file longer than the window, scroll down
  2. Modify the file in another application (e.g. `touch` in Terminal)
  3. Switch back to ST2

Expected result:

Scroll position and cursor on in the same place as before (as long as that line still exists in the file of course)


Actual result:

Window is scrolled to top, cursor is placed on beginning of the first line.


Build 2181, OS  X

+1

Add the ability to refocus a folder / project that is already open instead of reopening it in a new window

Marcus Eting fa 11 anys 0

I would like the option so that if I open a folder that is already open in Sublime Text it would just refocus the window that is already open. Same thing goes for projects or workspaces. I have tried setting all of the following options:

	"close_windows_when_empty": true,
	"create_window_at_startup": false,




	"open_files_in_new_window": true,
	"hot_exit": true,
	"remember_open_files": true,
But nothing seems to change so I can get the behavior I would like. Textmate did this - I can't seem to get it to work in Sublime Text though.
+1

sublime.packages_path returns Unicode string

Marc Schlaich fa 12 anys actualitzat fa 12 anys 1