Sublime Text 2 is a text editor for OS X, Linux and Windows, currently in beta.
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Make the sidebar moveable
It would be very nice if we can move the side bar from left to bottom (or somewhere else and even make it "undockable".
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More options to be added to command line
Wish to be able to:
- open files in read-only mode (should be controlled thru command line)
- in full screen mode (can be added as Sublime setting or as command line option)
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"Next Result" should "Show Build Results" if tab was closed.
Sometimes I close the build results tab and want to open it again. If I want to jump to a build error, I obviously want it open.
Easier solution: Is there a way to bind keys to "Show Build Results" (haven't found it..)
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Dropping selections in find panel.
Keeping Command key pressed down when clicking on 'Find' should drop a selection.
This way the user could find next by clicking with mouse, and drop a selection by command-clicking.
This way the user could find next by clicking with mouse, and drop a selection by command-clicking.
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Infinite loop when storage device is pulled
I just discover a bug that is quite annoying. If you got a file open on a storage device (I had a usb device plugged in) and unplug that device you got a infinite loop and a message showing you that a required file is on an external unit that does not exists anymore. If you plug the stick or device back in it works ok again.
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From Westward plastics group to Brissco: Delivering More than Materials
Westward Group to Brissco
Plastics
Plastic has been around for many decades now. It would hard to imagine life today without plastic and all its various practical uses and applications. It is almost as ubiquitous as the water we drink and the air we breathe. We wear it, sit on it, play with it, sing with it, ride with it, fly with it, work with it and live with it every minute of our lives. Thanks to plastic manufacturers, we have a material that is cheap to manufacture and easy to mould into whatever shape and use we can come up with.
One manufacturer of plastics that has been around for quite a while is Brissco Plastics. Since it was established in 1948, Brissco has remained a family-owned business and has been fortunate to having a very dependable workforce. Many of Brissco’s production staff have been with the company for more than 25 years and possess a vast wealth of knowledge and experience. As an independent company, it has the flexibility (just like plastic!) to cater to the needs of its customers and appreciate that the 'extra attention to detail' is where it can make a big difference.
Brissco Plastics is a division of Brissco (Equipment) Ltd, formed in 2011 by the acquisition of Westward Plastics, which had been in business since 1984 and specialising in the supply and fabrication of industrial, display and engineering plastic materials throughout the United Kingdom.
Brissco has developed strong partnerships with many suppliers, enabling it to offer a range of quality brand leading products such as Perspex, Plexiglas and Altuglas Acrylics, Makrolon and Marlon Polycarbonates, Vivak and Apet Polyester, Foamalux and Westfoam Foam PVC's, Alliance Aluminium Composite, Swish, Floplast, Exitex and Living Space Upvc Building Materials.
To augment its range of branded leading materials, it offers offer its customers customized plastic fabrication service, using the latest CNC processing equipment, together with traditional fabrication skills which allow it to provide repeatable accuracy and quality in the manufacture of fabricated products for industrial and commercial use, fully supported by its team of technically-experienced staff.
With in-house facilities which include screen-printing, print-finishing, plastic fabrication as well as the distribution of, both, building plastics and semi-finished plastic (in sheet, rod and tube form), Brissco continues to provide its customers more than just materials.
Indeed, we seem to take it for granted; but plastics mean a modern, comfortable and convenient life for us all.
Plastic has been around for many decades now. It would hard to imagine life today without plastic and all its various practical uses and applications. It is almost as ubiquitous as the water we drink and the air we breathe. We wear it, sit on it, play with it, sing with it, ride with it, fly with it, work with it and live with it every minute of our lives. Thanks to plastic manufacturers, we have a material that is cheap to manufacture and easy to mould into whatever shape and use we can come up with.
One manufacturer of plastics that has been around for quite a while is Brissco Plastics. Since it was established in 1948, Brissco has remained a family-owned business and has been fortunate to having a very dependable workforce. Many of Brissco’s production staff have been with the company for more than 25 years and possess a vast wealth of knowledge and experience. As an independent company, it has the flexibility (just like plastic!) to cater to the needs of its customers and appreciate that the 'extra attention to detail' is where it can make a big difference.
Brissco Plastics is a division of Brissco (Equipment) Ltd, formed in 2011 by the acquisition of Westward Plastics, which had been in business since 1984 and specialising in the supply and fabrication of industrial, display and engineering plastic materials throughout the United Kingdom.
Brissco has developed strong partnerships with many suppliers, enabling it to offer a range of quality brand leading products such as Perspex, Plexiglas and Altuglas Acrylics, Makrolon and Marlon Polycarbonates, Vivak and Apet Polyester, Foamalux and Westfoam Foam PVC's, Alliance Aluminium Composite, Swish, Floplast, Exitex and Living Space Upvc Building Materials.
To augment its range of branded leading materials, it offers offer its customers customized plastic fabrication service, using the latest CNC processing equipment, together with traditional fabrication skills which allow it to provide repeatable accuracy and quality in the manufacture of fabricated products for industrial and commercial use, fully supported by its team of technically-experienced staff.
With in-house facilities which include screen-printing, print-finishing, plastic fabrication as well as the distribution of, both, building plastics and semi-finished plastic (in sheet, rod and tube form), Brissco continues to provide its customers more than just materials.
Indeed, we seem to take it for granted; but plastics mean a modern, comfortable and convenient life for us all.
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CORRECTED-UPDATE 3-U.S., Mexico probe Citi over money laundering law compliance
The Koyal Group Insurance
Compliance
(Corrects headline to show probe is over legal compliance)
March 3 (Reuters) - A federal grand jury is probing Citigroup Inc, including its Banamex USA affiliate, over compliance with the U.S. Bank Secrecy Act and anti-money laundering requirements, the company said.
In an annual filing on Monday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the company said the probe includes subpoenas from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Massachusetts.
The company also said Banamex USA had received a subpoena from the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. While the U.S. attorney may bring criminal charges, the FDIC is a civil agency.
The criminal probe follows other problems that have surfaced with Banamex, which operates Citigroup's largest single consumer bank outside of the United States and has been portrayed by the company as a model of its global strategy.
Separately, Citigroup disclosed it had received a grand jury subpoena seeking information about two mortgage securities that were issued in the middle of 2007.
It is the first time the bank has raised the prospect of involvement in a criminal case concerning the sale of mortgage bonds prior to the 2008 financial crisis. Reuters had reported in December that U.S. authorities were preparing civil fraud charges against Citigroup over the sale of flawed mortgage securities.
The bank also said on Monday it had received several subpoenas and requests for information from several state attorneys general and the SEC about its mortgage bond business.
MEXICAN INVESTIGATION
Mexico's banking regulator said on Monday it is also investigating whether Banamex committed crimes or flouted regulations.
"Inside Banamex we are looking at the documentation that they provided and the operation of the whole bank to determine these possible crimes or deviations from the regulations," Jaime Gonzalez, President of the Comision Nacional Bancaria y de Valores (CNBV), said in an interview on Mexico's Radio Formula.
Gonzalez said he hoped to have conclusions from the investigation in two to three weeks.
Citigroup disclosed on Friday that it had discovered at least $400 million in fraudulent loans in its Banamex subsidiary in Mexico and said employees might have been involved in the apparent crime.
Law enforcers from the Mexican Attorney General's office and from the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation and Securities and Exchange Commission are investigating the transactions, people familiar with the probes have said.
Banamex made the loans to Mexican oil services company Oceanografia on the basis of payments due for services provided to Mexican state-owned oil company Pemex.
But Citigroup said it could not validate that Pemex owed $400 million to Oceanografia, or more than two-thirds of the invoices it had used as collateral for its loans.
In the third quarter of 2013 problems with about $300 million of loans that Banamex had made to three Mexican homebuilders prompted Citigroup to book reserves for expected losses.
Citigroup Chief Executive Michael Corbat called the incident a "despicable crime" when it was first disclosed and said then the bank believes it was an isolated episode. He also said that criminal actions by Mexican authorities might allow Citigroup to recover damages.
Citigroup is the third-largest U.S. bank by assets. The company views its international business as a competitive advantage over other big banks in the United States.
(Reporting by David Henry and Jonathan Stempel in New York, Christine Murray in Mexico City and Aruna Viswanatha in Washington; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn and Sofina Mirza-Reid)
(Corrects headline to show probe is over legal compliance)
March 3 (Reuters) - A federal grand jury is probing Citigroup Inc, including its Banamex USA affiliate, over compliance with the U.S. Bank Secrecy Act and anti-money laundering requirements, the company said.
In an annual filing on Monday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the company said the probe includes subpoenas from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Massachusetts.
The company also said Banamex USA had received a subpoena from the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. While the U.S. attorney may bring criminal charges, the FDIC is a civil agency.
The criminal probe follows other problems that have surfaced with Banamex, which operates Citigroup's largest single consumer bank outside of the United States and has been portrayed by the company as a model of its global strategy.
Separately, Citigroup disclosed it had received a grand jury subpoena seeking information about two mortgage securities that were issued in the middle of 2007.
It is the first time the bank has raised the prospect of involvement in a criminal case concerning the sale of mortgage bonds prior to the 2008 financial crisis. Reuters had reported in December that U.S. authorities were preparing civil fraud charges against Citigroup over the sale of flawed mortgage securities.
The bank also said on Monday it had received several subpoenas and requests for information from several state attorneys general and the SEC about its mortgage bond business.
MEXICAN INVESTIGATION
Mexico's banking regulator said on Monday it is also investigating whether Banamex committed crimes or flouted regulations.
"Inside Banamex we are looking at the documentation that they provided and the operation of the whole bank to determine these possible crimes or deviations from the regulations," Jaime Gonzalez, President of the Comision Nacional Bancaria y de Valores (CNBV), said in an interview on Mexico's Radio Formula.
Gonzalez said he hoped to have conclusions from the investigation in two to three weeks.
Citigroup disclosed on Friday that it had discovered at least $400 million in fraudulent loans in its Banamex subsidiary in Mexico and said employees might have been involved in the apparent crime.
Law enforcers from the Mexican Attorney General's office and from the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation and Securities and Exchange Commission are investigating the transactions, people familiar with the probes have said.
Banamex made the loans to Mexican oil services company Oceanografia on the basis of payments due for services provided to Mexican state-owned oil company Pemex.
But Citigroup said it could not validate that Pemex owed $400 million to Oceanografia, or more than two-thirds of the invoices it had used as collateral for its loans.
In the third quarter of 2013 problems with about $300 million of loans that Banamex had made to three Mexican homebuilders prompted Citigroup to book reserves for expected losses.
Citigroup Chief Executive Michael Corbat called the incident a "despicable crime" when it was first disclosed and said then the bank believes it was an isolated episode. He also said that criminal actions by Mexican authorities might allow Citigroup to recover damages.
Citigroup is the third-largest U.S. bank by assets. The company views its international business as a competitive advantage over other big banks in the United States.
(Reporting by David Henry and Jonathan Stempel in New York, Christine Murray in Mexico City and Aruna Viswanatha in Washington; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn and Sofina Mirza-Reid)
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spacegray UI integration
that would be great if you integrate spacegray UI
https://github.com/kkga/spacegray by default within sublime 3
thank you
https://github.com/kkga/spacegray by default within sublime 3
thank you
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