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

+1

can't save any file

Jac Fitzgerald 12 år siden opdateret 12 år siden 2

I have a file open in ST2. I have no other programs running on the machine, which I just rebooted. I edit the file and hit Ctrl-S, I get the error 'can't save file'. Opening a random other file gets the same error on save. Editing the same files in any other program (notepad, Visual Studio) works fine as expected. Process Explorer tells me that this file is not open in any other program. I also found that a number of other people have run into this same dialog: http://www.sublimetext.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=9240 with no known explanation. 


I installed ST2 a few weeks ago and it worked up until a few days ago, and has not saved any files since then. I have rebooted the machine and closed every other program there is. The machine is running Windows Server 2012.

+1

Multifile Edit - Split Screen

Christopher Roberts-York 12 år siden 0
I believe it was a feature in the Sublime Text 1.  I would like to see the multifile edit re-implemeneted. Similar to the Alt click to get multiple cursors except across files when in split screen.
+1

How to save/restore all the Sublime Text 2 config/plugins on another computer

earlyadopter 12 år siden opdateret af Jordan Brough 12 år siden 1
What would be a way to save all the configuration/plugins I have on one Mac to restore it on another one? Is there some predefined location I need to copy all the files and restore them on another machine?
+1

Fixes to java syntax

Matt Hauck 11 år siden opdateret 11 år siden 1

The following additions to the Java.tmLanguage file would be very wonderful. 


Add to `repository -> parameters -> patterns`:

<dict>

  <key>include</key>

  <string>#annotations</string>

</dict>


Add to `repository -> parameters -> enums -> patterns`:

<dict>

  <key>include</key>

  <string>#comments</string>

</dict>


+1

MultiMarkdown mode not recognizing 'format: complete' on first line (should be case insensitive for keys)

Darin Morrison 13 år siden opdateret 13 år siden 1
In the MultiMarkdown user guide on page 18 it says:

Metadata keys are case insensitive and stripped of all spaces during processing. This means that Base Header Level, base headerlevel, and baseheaderlevel are all the same.

However, in MultiMarkdown.tmLanguage, the check for "Format: complete" on the first line is case sensitive:

<key>firstLineMatch</key>

<string>^Format:\s*(?i:complete)\s*$</string>

Changing it to the following fixes the problem:

<key>firstLineMatch</key>

<string>^(?i:Format):\s*(?i:complete)\s*$</string>
+1

problems with C syntax

David Raleigh 12 år siden 0

I was looking to use sublime text 2 in order to help me sort through some c code.  This one file messes up the sublime c syntax coloring. Proj4 is a fairly popular projection library used for mapping and GIS. I think sublime is ready to rock some preprocessor statements and is confused by the crazy pound defines in this code.  I hate looking at code from this library and would much rather look at sublimes gorgeous colors, but for now I'm stuck with Proj4:


http://svn.osgeo.org/metacrs/proj/trunk/proj/src/geod.c


Here's a screenshot:


Image 232

+1

Add the ability to enter a license key via bash or some other development environment automation tool such as boxen

Jeff Fairchild 11 år siden 0
I'd like to specify a team multi-user license in our development environment setup and have the sublime use the key during installation. The dev then loads up a fully registered sublime without ever having to see/worry about the key.
+1

"Where" box of the Find in Files dialog should have a pull-down

Mike Cline 12 år siden opdateret af Joel Thornton 12 år siden 1

I did not realize until just now that you could use the arrow keys in the Find in Files dialog's "where" field.  This is great, but not obvious at all. 


A more common idiom in software that remembers past entries is to have a down-arrow on the text field that makes it function like a drop down (containing past entries) when you click the arrow.  I would suggest adding this kind of a drop-down to any text field in sublime where it is possible to view a list of past entries.

Apart from being more obvious to the user, the drop-down has the additional advantage of being able to see all  the options, rather than having to tap tap tap tap on the arrow keys, where you have find trade off speed vs the possibility of skipping over what you are looking for.
+1

auto complete

Kerem Ulutaş 11 år siden 0
Auto complete popup disappears when trying to go up on the 1st item with the up arrow key or trying to go down on the last item with down arrow key. The issue is the same as stated under "issue 1" here.

I've also encountered related info on the dev builds changelog page,: under Build 2161:

  • Auto complete: Popup can now be dismissed with the arrow keys

Can there be a fix (a setting for example) which at least offers a way to disable this "feature"? I think it is needed by many people who are trying to learn programming in a language or who don't want to memorize method names or attributes of a language at all.
+1

Blue Crown Capital | Bank of America liable for Countrywide mortgage fraud

fearlharbor 11 år siden 0

(Reuters) - Bank of America Corp was found liable for fraud on Wednesday over defective mortgages sold by its Countrywide unit, a major win for the U.S. government in one of the few trials stemming from the financial crisis.


After a four-week trial, a federal jury in New York found the bank liable on one civil fraud charge. Countrywide originated shoddy home loans in a process called "Hustle" and sold them to government mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government said.


The four men and six women on the jury also found former Countrywide executive Rebecca Mairone liable on the one fraud charge she faced.


The U.S. Justice Department has said it would seek up to $848.2 million, the gross loss it said Fannie and Freddie suffered on the loans. But it will be up to U.S. 


District Judge Jed Rakoff to decide on the penalty. Arguments on how the judge will assess penalties are set for December 5.


Any penalty would add to the more than $40 billion Bank of America has spent on disputes stemming from the 2008 financial crisis.


"The jury's decision concerned a single Countrywide program that lasted several months and ended before Bank of America's acquisition of the company," Bank of America spokesman Lawrence Grayson said. "We will evaluate our options for appeal."


Marc Mukasey, a lawyer for Mairone, called his client a "woman of integrity, ethics and honesty," adding they would fight on. "She never engaged in fraud, because there was no fraud," he said.


Wednesday's verdict was a major victory for the Justice Department, which has been criticized for failing to hold banks and executives accountable for their roles in the events leading up to the financial crisis.


The government continues to investigate banks for conduct related to the financial crisis. The verdict comes as the government is negotiating a $13 billion settlement with JPMorgan Chase & Co to resolve a number of probes and claims arising from its mortgage business, including the sale of mortgage bonds.


blue crown capital mortgages


RISKY LOANS


The lawsuit stemmed from a whistleblower case originally brought by Edward O'Donnell, a former Countrywide executive who stands to earn up to $1.6 million for his role.


The case centered on a program called the "High Speed Swim Lane" - also called "HSSL" or "Hustle" - that government lawyers said Countrywide started in 2007.

The Justice Department contended that fraud and other defects were rampant in HSSL loans because Countrywide eliminated loan-quality checkpoints and paid employees based on loan volume and speed.


The Justice Department said the process was overseen by Mairone, a former chief operating officer of Countrywide's Full Spectrum Lending division. Mairone is now a managing director at JPMorgan.


About 43 percent of the loans sold to the mortgage giants were materially defective, the government said.


Bank of America bought Countrywide in July 2008. Two months later, the government took over Fannie and Freddie.


Bank of America and Mairone denied wrongdoing. Lawyers for the bank sought to show the jury that Countrywide had tried to ensure it was issuing quality loans and that no fraud occurred.


The lawsuit was the first financial crisis-related case against a bank by the Justice Department to go to trial under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act (FIRREA).


The law, passed in the wake of the 1980s savings-and-loan scandals, covers fraud affecting federally insured financial institutions.


The Justice Department, and particularly lawyers in the office of U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara in the Southern District of New York, have sought to dust off the rarely used law and bring cases against banks accused of fraud.


Among its attractions, FIRREA provides a statute of limitations of 10 years and allows the government to bring civil cases for alleged criminal wrongdoing.


Virginia Gibson, a lawyer at the law firm Hogan Lovells, said the Bank of America verdict was a "big deal because it shows the scope of a tool the government has not used frequently since its inception."


Gibson and other lawyers say any appeal by Bank of America would likely focus on a ruling made by the judge before the trial that endorsed a government position that it can bring a FIRREA case against a bank when the bank itself was the financial institution affected by the fraud.


The case was one of three lawsuits in New York where judges had endorsed that interpretation. Banks have generally argued that the interpretation is contrary to the intent of Congress, which they said is more focused on others committing fraud on banks.


Bank of America's case was the first to go to trial, a rarity given that banks more typically choose to settle government claims instead of face a jury. But Bank of America had said that it "can't be expected to compensate every entity that claims losses that actually were caused by the economic downturn."


In a statement, Bharara said Bank of America "chose to defend Countrywide's conduct with all its might and money, claiming there was no case here."


"This office will never hesitate to go to trial to expose fraudulent corporate conduct and to hold companies accountable, particularly when it has caused such harm to the public," Bharara said.


In late afternoon trading, Bank of America shares were down 27 cents at $14.25 on the New York Stock Exchange.


The case is U.S. ex rel. O'Donnell v. Bank of America Corp et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 12-01422.

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