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

The Westward Group Paris Franc
Westward Group is an innovative mergers-and-acquisitions (M&A) advisory firm that focuses on selling lower and middle market companies. Westward Group builds a world-class M&A organization and seeks to exemplify excellence in every facet of our business. http://westwardgroup.com/company.html
Our corporate culture is founded on a commitment to client-centered service and an adherence to the highest principles of personal and professional integrity. Hence, Westward Group dealmakers are guided by the following values which serve as the keys to our continued success:
› We believe that transparency or full disclosure make it easy for us to accurately and honestly deliver all we can do for our clients.
› We work diligently and conscientiously to provide an extraordinary effort on behalf of our client.
› We continually ask ourselves what is in our client’s best interest.
› We believe in our clients and actively advocate for them.
› We believe that a high level of optimism and enthusiasm is contagious.
› We believe that maintaining a high standard of values in business attracts success.
› We believe that a well-concerted team effort will always win the day.

Paste keyboard shortcut in save dialogue
Other keyboard shortcuts, such as Cut and Select All, do work in the same input field.

Improve regex highlighting
String:
HelloWorld
Find RegEx:
(Hello)World
Result
"Hello" highlighted in blue
"World" highlighted in yellow

when the right mouse button is pressed, it should show the option to auto-indent
when the right mouse button is pressed, it should show the option to auto-indent

8 spaces per tab instead of 4
When i use tab in sublime it gives me a tab equal to 4 spaces which is what i want. But when i open a file that i made in sublime in another editor like emacs, my tabs are suddenly 8 spaces. The weird thing is that 1 space in sublime is also 1 space in other editors. Also one tab in emacs gives me two spaces in sublime.
So to sum it up:
In Sublime
1 Sublime tab = 4 spaces
1 Text tab = 2 spaces
Pure text:
1 Sublime tab = 8 spaces
1 Text tab = 4 spaces

insert sequence of characters ((0,1,2) or (a,b,c) or (x,y,z))
I write codes for Computer Graphic which deal with a loth of vectors, matrix, index and coordinates it would be so awesome if I have multiple selections i can insert a sequence of charaters ie:
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
with multiple selections inside the brackets I can quickly add :
[0]
[1]
[2]
or if you have multiple selection at the end of each word 'button'
'button'
'button'
'button'
'button'
you can turn it into
'button1'
'button2'
'button3'
'button4'
or turning:
'translate'
'translate'
'translate'
into:
'translateX'
'translateY'
'translateZ'
Thanks very much for your consideration

Vintage mode missing paragraph selection
Vintage mode seems to be missing "inner paragraph" text objects (though it does have "a paragraph" text object).
e.g. commands like vip, yip should select/yank the paragraph.
In various LaTeX packages, an additional text object "environment" is added (ae/ie) to select the contents between \begin{env} and \end{env}. I can't see obviously how this would be extended, but that'd also be very useful

Tech Tips, and Warnings, for Budget Travelers
O.K., so those lessons were intended not for me but for the travel industry types at EyeforTravel’s Social Media and Mobile Strategies for Travel conference, which I attended last week in San Francisco. I did, though, pick up some tips — and a few warnings — about how a budget traveler should maneuver in this fast-changing world.
TIPS
Hold those prices: Several companies allow you to put a no-risk hold on airline tickets for days or weeks for a small fee. If you haven’t heard of this, you most likely will. Robert Brown, the founder of Options Away, one of those companies, said his service’s “call option” will be integrated into more mainstream booking sites within months.
How could it save you money? It’s sort of like insurance: capture a low price before your plans are finalized and take a few days or weeks to decide. If you cancel, you lose only the fee. (If the prices goes down, you save more.) A competitor, Level Skies, has the advantage of allowing you to move the travel dates forward or back one day up until when you finalize your purchase. Their interface, though, needs some work — and there’s no app yet.
Better photo sharing: Have you already traded a heavy SLR camera for your iPhone when you travel, posting your pictures on Facebook and Instagram? Several sites now help you share your experience more elegantly. A new one that officially launched at the conference and should soon be available at the App Store, Tripstr (iPhone only, at least for now), is designed to turn your photos into an appealing record of your trip that others can view and even add to their own “bucket list.” In addition to sharing with others on your Tripstr network, you can share a link through Facebook and email.
Get an emergency interpreter: Google Translate and its automated competitors can be miraculous in everyday situations abroad. But if you really need an interpreter in a difficult situation — when you’re a victim of crime, your travel companion lands in the hospital or you’re just horribly lost, for example, instant, reasonably priced live translation is hard to come by. A new app due out next month, TalkLingo, undercuts established services like VerbalizeIt by charging $1 a minute, without requiring a subscription or package fee. It will offer 200 languages, with interpreters from 20 major ones from Spanish to Swahili, guaranteed to be available within a minute.
Ready to be pushed? Another conference consensus: users will need to seek information less. Instead, phones will know what you want without asking you. That’s an evolution that, in theory, is especially useful for travel. Walking through an unfamiliar city, your phone puts together where you are with what it knows about you and pushes out suggested attractions, historical information, even articles from trusted sources. Budget travelers might be pinged about nearby sales or receive discount offers for the restaurant right across the street. For those of you who find this horrifying, here’s some mild solace: Companies (at least those at the conference) know bothering you unnecessarily is a grave danger for this technology.
Continue reading the main story
There are already apps that do this. Google’s Field Trip, currently available for iPhone and Android, pushes content to you when you’re in the vicinity of a historical site, architectural landmark, shopping area, restaurant or the like. I’ve tried it in New York, where I’ve had some success with it — for example, as I passed near a new Mexican restaurant near my home, a review popped up from Eater.com. (Lots of other trusted and lesser-known sites have their content integrated here, like Zagat, Thrillist and Atlas Obscura; you can customize which ones you hear from.)
The new technology is especially designed for what those in the know (now including me) call “wearables” like Google Glass — which several conference attendees were strutting around with — and the company’s coming smartwatches). But those are likely to stay expensive for quite a while. Budget travelers who want to try it will have to continue to do stare down at their phones and then stuff them back in their pockets for the time being.
It’s not just Field Trip, but other technology that integrates more smoothly into your phone, like Yahoo’s Aviate (in beta for Android) or Google Now — which is part of the Google search app — that is now growing on me. On the morning of my 8 a.m. flight from New York to San Francisco for the conference, my alarm did not go off. About an hour later, my phone let out a single beep, and I somehow woke up and looked. “Time to leave for UA 397,” it read. “Leave by 6:37 AM to arrive at the airport 60 minutes before your flight.” I bolted out of bed, grabbed my bag and hopped in a taxi, barely making the flight and saving a rebooking fee. If I were nit-picking, I’d say it should be smart enough to know I prefer public transportation and ping me an hour earlier, saving me a few more bucks. It’s not as if Google doesn’t know what I do for a living.
Is customer service transitioning to social media? Shashank Nigam, the chief executive of a research and consulting company called SimpliFlying, told an amazing story of a passenger on Turkish Airlines who, frustrated that the flight attendants would not turn down the heat, vented on Facebook via the plane’s free Wi-Fi. Because spots sent from the plane’s IP address are flagged, the airline’s social media team spotted the comment, contacted the pilot, and a compromise was reached. Many other airlines are also responsive on Twitter: KLM, for example, says it responds to 4,500 tweets and Facebook posts a week, in 10 languages and always within an hour.
I asked Mr. Nigam if some companies had perhaps swung too many resources toward their social media response team to the detriment of call centers. “There is an unfair advantage to the connected traveler,” he said. But that’s true only with some companies — and don’t expect miracle solutions. Just having a Twitter team doesn’t instantly make the flood of requests during weather-related cancellations go away, for example. Still, the industry is moving in this direction if you don’t have a Twitter or Facebook account, it can’t hurt to open one just for this purpose — it might end up saving you time and money.
WARNINGS
You are the marketer: If there was one theme conference participants harped on repeatedly, it was that companies are relying less on traditional advertising campaigns and more on recruiting customers to market on their behalf. Mike De Jesus, head of travel for Twitter, noted that the company had counted 640 million conversations about travel. “There are some good opportunities for you as a brand to jump into these conversations,” he told company representatives.
Reviews required? Your social networks — or at least what’s public on them — also help hotels in their efforts to know you before you arrive, allowing them to “delight” you with a personally-tailored surprise. If that appeals, fine — in the places I stay, a clean bathroom is “delight” enough for me.
One presenter caught my ear by noting that hotels can now discover (or hire a company to help discover) which of their guests are frequent reviewers on TripAdvisor, presumably to delight the heck out of them. TripAdvisor says this would be difficult to do, but let’s say it isn’t. Does anyone see a problem here? I see two: 1) If hotels pamper TripAdvisor reviewers, their presumably rave reviews will bias the site’s influential rankings; 2) Nonreviewers become, by default, second-class citizens.
Maintain your independence: Company efforts to create customer loyalty are often bad news for budget travelers — something you already know if you’ve been tempted to book a more expensive flight just to gain miles toward a theoretical free trip on “your” airline. But that’s old news. At the conference, it seemed that companies are now quite keen on having you download their own apps. Those who use airline apps to access digital boarding passes or hotel apps to bypass check-in lines already know that this can be a very good idea. But be aware that companies can use their app to ping you with offers, and hope that as you become accustomed to the app, you’ll use it to book future trips, locking you into their brand instead of doing a broader search on, say, hotels.com. So remember: brand apps for convenience, search apps for booking.
http://www.gogobot.com/westhill-consulting-travel-an-singapore-attraction
https://foursquare.com/westhilltravel

Tabs UI (for open files) needs improvement
I recommend doing something like eclipse... only allow a certain number of tabs in the tab bar, and the rest are in a little menu that is accessible from the tab bar.
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