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

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Lokið

Delete lines

Patrick Turley 14 ár síðan updated by Jon Skinner 14 ár síðan 1
Something similar to in eclipse where you can select any portion of any number of lines and then with one key stroke delete all of the lines completely
Answer
Jon Skinner 14 ár síðan
Ctrl+Shift+K will now do this in build 2036
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Not a bug

Order files in goto palette according to stack

aristidesfl 13 ár síðan updated by Jon Skinner 13 ár síðan 1
Before starting write anything, the goto palette shows the currently open files.
This files are currently not ordered as the stack (despite being ordered by something strange, it looks like a bug?)
Answer
Jon Skinner 13 ár síðan
They are ordered in most recently used order
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Multi Select & selected file preview

hiver yan 13 ár síðan 0
Are there configurations to close these two features, 'multi'  select by mouse ofen make miss take, for  I want change 1 place, But i misstake selected 'multi'.

file preview quite good, but not smooth . 
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Westhill Consulting Insurance – Saving for your ageing parents : an easy guide to where to start

Cataleya Zoe 11 ár síðan í Plugin announcements 0
Saving for your ageing parents: an easy guide to where to start

The needs of elderly parents can surprise even those who are prepared, but you don’t have to support your family alone

Image 296

We all want to age like the late Pete Seeger, who celebrated his 90th birthday performing onstage in front of thousands of adoring fans of all ages at Madison Square Garden, and went on to entertain the Newport Jazz Festival audiences a few months later.

In our pragmatic moments, we know that the odds of living that long and in such good health aren’t in our favor. We know we need to plan not only to live longer but perhaps to spend more time in costly nursing homes or care facilities.

It's not just ourselves we have to worry about. Failing to develop a plan to help our parents in their final years could deliver a similar kind of blow to our emotional and financial wellbeing. In the last few months, I’ve watched three friends, ranging in age from their 40s to the early 60s, scramble to resolve non-medical problems for their parents. In all cases, that meant forking out on costly airfares to be there in person; in one case, it required money to hire a new accountant. “I’ve always been aware that at some point, there would be an emergency, but I had assumed it would be a stroke or something, not this,” one told me, ruefully.

A recent US Trust survey revealed that while about half of all Americans have planned for their own long-term care needs, only 18% of those with parents still living have factored in the possible need to help parents.

And yet, 26% of those under the age of 49 already were footing the bill for parents’ out-of-pocket medical expenses while 18% were contributing to long-term care costs.

I’m not suggesting that you double your savings rate to ensure that your nest egg is large enough to cover your needs as well as the needs of your parents and in-laws. That’s both illogical and – given that most of us are struggling to save for our own retirement – impractical. That doesn’t mean your hands are tied, however.

Start with the basics. Make a list of questions and fill out the answers. It's easiest to start with the most important documents you need to be prepared.

Do your parents have a health care proxy? A power of attorney prepared? Where are they located? In the midst of a crisis, you don’t want to go on a treasure hunt in quest of these crucial documents.

“Clients call me to say that hospitals won’t talk to them about treatment for their elderly father with dementia because no one has a healthcare proxy or knows where it is,” says Nan Giner, a partner at Boston-based Choate Investment Advisers.

Do your parents have long-term care insurance, or do they plan to “self-insure” and cover their costs from their savings?

“Knowing the answer to that question can help you understand how much risk there is that you’ll be called on to help” whether directly or by helping them to navigate the labyrinth of federal, state and local programs that exist to help fill gaps of this kind, says Dave Richmond, a financial adviser in Jackson, Michigan.

Beginning conversations on these topics might feel awkward – after all, it hasn’t been that long since your mom and dad were monitoring your behavior. But it’s important to be proactive. The more you’re able to communicate openly, the better the odds that you’ll spot something that otherwise might have developed into a crisis.

“Most of the parents I’ve worked with don’t want to be a burden to their children,” says Gideon Schein, founding partner of Eddy & Schein, a New York firm that manages personal finance and health insurance issues for senior citizens still living in their own homes. “The best way is to make parents aware that you’re asking for everyone’s benefit; that it’s a kindness to everyone in the family to be prepared – not for death, but for the rest of their lives.”

There are plenty of tips out there for ways to start tricky conversations like these. Bringing a third party into the discussion can also help, especially if your parents feel you’re overstepping your bounds, or you’re afraid of sounding greedy or self-interested. “Sometimes having a mediator takes the tension out of a situation,” says Schein.

A good place to start is an elder care attorney, who is intimately familiar with these issues, including specialized vehicles like pooled income trusts that can be invaluable to elderly individuals facing a financial shortfall in covering the cost of their care in their final years. They can refer their clients to other specialists, including people in Schein’s rapidly-growing industry, members of the American Association of Daily Money Managers.

None of this practical stuff will make it easier to deal with the emotional burden of octogenarian parents struggling with dementia or other major ailments. But part of everyone’s personal financial plan should include strategies for dealing with some of the most likely scenarios involving their parents. That leaves everyone in a less vulnerable position.

http://www.youtube.com/user/westhillconsultingIn

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I would like step-by-step directions on how to download/convert/install dictionary.

Braulio Stoker 11 ár síðan 0
The installation process assumes users are IT pros, so installing a dictionary is not possible.  Thanks.
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How to auto complete custom snippets in plain text mode?

Henry Huang 12 ár síðan updated by Nicolas 11 ár síðan 1

I tried setting

"auto_complete_selector": "text, source - comment"

in the user profile, but once that's enabled, I can see the snippet everywhere, even when I am using other syntax specific file. I just want to limit the snippet to be auto completed in plain text mode, how do I do that?

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Emacs-style buffer evaluation

Timo Varis 12 ár síðan 0

In emacs it is possible to write lisp-code to buffer and evaluate it directly to editing environment. TE2 seems to provide python console, but console does not have flexibility of a real buffer.

Functionality would be better, if you could write code in buffer and evaluate it directly with a single keyboard shortcut.

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The Economist explains - Why is renewable energy so expensive?

Janel Klopfer 11 ár síðan í Plugin announcements 0
MOST people agree that carbon emissions from power stations are a significant cause of climate change. These days a fiercer argument is over what to do about it. Many governments are pumping money into renewable sources of electricity, such as wind turbines, solar farms, hydroelectric and geothermal plants. But countries with large amounts of renewable generation, such as Denmark and Germany, face the highest energy prices in the rich world. In Britain electricity from wind farms costs twice as much as that from traditional sources; solar power is even moredear. What makes it so costly?
Enthusiasts have used wind turbines to generate electricity since the 1880s, but efforts to build very large wind farms started only in the late 1970s. Utility-scale solar and other renewable generation is more recent still. Despite the lure of government subsidies, there are still too few companies making renewable kit (almost all the wind turbines in British seas, as one example, are produced by a single firm). Supply-chain bottlenecks have frustrated governments scrabbling to install new renewable capacity. And compared with traditional power stations, renewable generators are cheap to run but costly to build, which makes them particularly vulnerable to changes in the cost of capital.
A more fundamental challenge is that renewable generators also impose costs on the wider electricity grid. The best sites are often far from big cities (on Scottish hillsides, French lakes or American deserts) which makes them expensive to connect. Many common types of renewable generators only produce power intermittently—when the sun shines or when the wind blows. Wind turbines, for example, spin only about a third of the time. That means countries which have a lot of renewable generation must still pay to maintain traditional kinds of power stations ready to fire up when demand peaks. And energy from these stations also becomes more expensive because they may not run at full-blast.
The high cost of renewable generators obstructs efforts to tackle climate change, even when governments dig deep to fund them. One danger is that sharp rises in energy prices will drive manufacturers to set up in less “green” countries, which might mean citizens end up consuming more carbon, through imports. Another worry is that governments will end up extending the life of dirty coal plants to serve as back-up when renewable generation is low—or when over-ambitious renewable roll-outs run out of steam. But for now the main consequence of high renewable costs is growing interest in controversial alternatives. The price of nuclear power has been rising for decades, but it still looks less expensive than many types of renewable generation. Gas-fired power stations are roughly half as polluting as coal-fired ones. Building more of them could provide a cheaper way for countries to cut emissions in the short term, and buy renewable operators time to bring their costs under control.
http://www.economist.com/blogs/economist-explains/2014/01/economist-explains-0?fsrc=gn_ep
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select from autocomplete

Justin Noel 11 ár síðan 0

It would be nice if each of the autocomplete suggestions came with a shortcut key so if I have five autocomplete suggestions that begin with the same prefix I could select, say the third one, by typing 3 (or whatever) rather than typing most of the command out.

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incorrect parsing of UTF-8 Javascript variable names

Leonard Hecker 12 ár síðan Uppfært 12 ár síðan 1
Sublime Text's rules are incorrect and don't work with UTF-8 characters. For instance the rule:
([a-zA-Z_?$][\w?$]*)\s*(=)\s*(function)\s*(\()(.*?)(\))
which should "match stuff like: play = function() { … }".
But Javascript allows much more valid characters - see: http://stackoverflow.com/a/9337047

A rule like
([^\s\d]\S*)\s*(=)\s*(function)\s*(\()(.*?)(\))
is also incorrect, but works much better than the current one.

If I replace those 3
([a-zA-Z_?.$][\w?.$]*)
([a-zA-Z_?$][\w?$]*)
([a-zA-Z_$]\w*)
in JavaScript/JavaScript.tmLanguage with
([^\s\d]\S*)
it works again.