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

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Error windows EVERYWHERE when deleting Packages while ST is running

Scott Vivian 12 lat temu 0

1. Open Sublime Text.

2. Go to Prefences > Browse Packages...

3. Delete (or cut & paste to a different folder) a bunch of the folders here.

4. Marvel at the complete system breakdown when 50+ error alerts are generated ALL AT ONCE!! It took me over 5 minutes to clear them all.


Sure, deleting stuff from these directories when ST is running may not be the best idea, but ONE error window will suffice! ST shouldn't collapse like that...

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Allow editing in "Find in Files..."

Sergey Telshevsky 11 lat temu 0
When searching for anything, it would be a killer feature for an editor that has multiselect, to allow editing all files in one, you select the search string and may perform something like comment all strings that have the needle by going to the beginning of the line and inserting comment tag. This commenting in beginning of the line is impossible to do with "Replace"
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Error when delete file on Sublime Text 3

Lê hồng hiếu 11 lat temu 0

I tried and find it SublimeText3 following error: When I delete any file on one sublime interface, it is still displayed on the interface of the SublimeText3. Only when I restart it takes away from the look of the SublimeText3

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The 10 Places Where Health Insurance Costs The Least - Quora - Massachusetts Westhill Consulting Healthcare Insurance

The 10 Places Where Health Insurance Costs The Least
By EDITOR

People in much of Minnesota, northwestern Pennsylvania and Tucson, Ariz., are getting the best bargains from the health care law's new insurance marketplaces. Their premiums run half as much as those in the country's most expensive markets.

The 10 regions with the lowest premiums in the nation also include Salt Lake City, all of Hawaii and eastern Tennessee. This ranking is based on the lowest cost of a silver plan, the midrange plan most consumers are choosing.

What sets these bargain markets apart? They tend to have robust competition among hospitals and doctors, allowing insurers to wrangle lower rates.

Many doctors in these places are salaried rather than being paid by the visit or procedure. The salaried approach weakens financial incentives to perform more procedures. Health systems focus on organizing patient care rather than letting specialists work detached from each other.

The lowest monthly silver premium in the country is offered in the Minneapolis-St. Paul region, where a 40-year-old will pay $154 a month for a Preferred One plan. Just across the Wisconsin border, that same kind of plan — but with a different insurer and other doctors and hospitals — costs nearly three times as much.

Insurers were able to negotiate low rates with hospitals and doctors in the Twin Cities because they could choose from among four major health care systems. Both Fairview Health Services, which runs the University of Minnesota Medical Center and is included in the lowest plan's network, and Allina Health, the largest system in the Twin Cities and operator of Abbott Northwestern Hospital, have been in the vanguard of experimenting with more efficient ways to care for patients, such as accountable care organizations and putting doctors on salary, said Stephen Parents, a health economist at the University of Minnesota.
"Minnesota has had years if not decades of experience with managed care," he said.

Most counties in central and northern Minnesota also have premiums that are among the lowest in the nation. Michael Rothman, commissioner of Minnesota's Department of Commerce, which regulates insurers, said the state moved early to enact cost controls, such as restricting how much insurers can spend on things other than medical care and requiring annual insurance rates to go through state review.
Several of the other lowest cost areas, including Salt Lake City and Hawaii, also have major hospitals and health systems that have been at the forefront of integrating health care. Those systems foster and reward collaboration among primary care doctors, specialists and nurses. But people who buy the cheapest Salt Lake City plan won't have access to Intermountain Healthcare, the most prestigious system in the area.

Innovative hospital practices don't guarantee cheap insurance. In Rochester, Minn., the home of the Mayo Clinic, the lowest priced silver plan costs $305 a month, which is above the national median.

Although Mayo's doctors are salaried and the system practices integrated care, its prices are higher than in Minneapolis, said Dannette Coleman, an executive at Medical, the insurer that offers the lowest priced silver plan in that area. Given Mayo's extensive network of clinics in the region, "you really cannot be in that area in that state if you don't have the Mayo Clinic Health System in your network," she said. Mayo officials didn't respond to a request for comment.
In eastern Tennessee, cheap premiums are notable because many residents face chronic health issues. Obesity and smoking are common. "We're the buckle of the stroke belt," said Kevin Spiegel, president of Erlanger Health System, which is included in the network of the least expensive silver plan in Chattanooga. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Tennessee was able to offer the lowest silver premiums around Knoxville and Chattanooga — $180 a month for a 40-year-old — by cutting deals with just one hospital system and their doctors in each region, said Henry Smith, the insurer's chief marketing officer.

"There are competing systems within those two regions to price against," Smith said. These lowest premium plans are "the narrowest network we have by far."
Likewise, in western Pennsylvania, Highmark was able to offer the low premium — $164 for a 40-year-old — by omitting nine hospitals and about 3,000 doctors who charge higher prices, according to spokeswoman Kristin Ash. Consumers wanting a wider network will have to pay Highmark 38 percent more a month.

These competitive markets are quite different than in southwest Georgia, the second most expensive region in the country. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia had no choice but to include in its network the Phoebe Putney Health System, which controls 86 percent of the market. The lowest premium in southwest Georgia is $461, 2 1/2 times the rate in Chattanooga.

Copyright 2014 Kaiser Health News. To see more, visit Kaiser Health News.

Westhill Consulting Insurance - Saving for your ageing parents: an easy guide to where to start - Westhill Consulting Insurance

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DRIESSEN: A model for climate-change fraud by global asia renewable energy - Global Warming - Zimbio

aurel 11 lat temu 0

source: www.zimbio.com/Global+Warming/articles/8-oFVshj-x_/DRIESSEN+model+climate+change+fraud+Global

“Dangerous manmade global warming” has become the most systematic, massive, costly fraud ever perpetrated. This is a harsh judgment, but the mounting evidence is undeniable.
As climate analyst Anthony Watts points out, after a very modest rise over 20 years, Earth’s average temperature hasn’t increased in 17 years, even as plant-fertilizing carbon-dioxide levels climbed to nearly 400 parts per million, still a minuscule 0.04 percent of the atmosphere.
The eight years since a Category 3 hurricane hit the United States marks the longest such period since 1900, he notes. Tornado frequency is the lowest on record. Droughts are shorter and less extreme than during the Dust Bowl and 1950s.
Arctic sea ice is back to normal, following the coldest summer in decades. Antarctic ice is at a record high. Sea levels continue to rise at a meager rate of 4 to 8 inches per century. Four of the five snowiest Northern Hemisphere winters in the last half-century have occurred since 2008. This year has brought the fewest U.S. forest fires in a decade and ranks second-lowest in acres burned.
Ignoring these facts, President Obama continues to claim “dangerous” carbon-dioxide emissions are causing “unprecedented” global warming, “more extreme” hurricanes, more wildfires, and rising seas that “threaten” coastal communities. His Environmental Protection Agency just proposed stringent job-killing carbon-dioxide regulations for coal-fired power plants and has more rules in the hopper — at a time when the economy is already turning full-time positions into part-time jobs and welfare.
As they prepared their latest scary report, U.N Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change scientists, bureaucrats and eco-activists devised ways to cover up the “bad” news. Among other things, they deleted all references to the 17-year temperature standstill from the “summary for policymakers.” They are editing the science to reflect the politics.
Chairman Rajendra Pachauri insists that there is “definitely an increase in our belief” that humans are “responsible for climate change” and there is “no slowdown” in planetary temperature increases. The IPCC says it still has “very high confidence” that its faulty models correctly represent carbon-dioxide effects on planetary temperatures. Student papers, environmentalist press releases and baseless claims about disappearing Himalayan glaciers remain in IPCC reports, falsely presented as “peer-reviewed” studies by credentialed experts.
They also ignored an IPCC graph that reveals how every single climate model over the past 22 years predicted that average global temperatures would be up to 1.6 degrees Fahrenheit higher than they actually were. How could they be so wrong?
There are several reasons: The models exaggerate climate sensitivity to carbon-dioxide levels, they assume all warming since the Industrial Revolution began is a result of human-caused carbon dioxide, they use temperature data contaminated by urban heat sources, and they simplify or ignore vital climate influences like solar-energy variations, cosmic-ray fluxes, clouds, precipitation, ocean currents and recurrent phenomena like El Nino and La Nina. In other words, “GIGO”: faulty assumptions, data, algorithms, analytical methodologies and other garbage in — predictive garbage out.
Yet, the models are used to justify policies and regulations that penalize hydrocarbon use, raise energy prices, and hammer jobs, the economy and living standards.
Countries are spending billions of dollars annually on bogus models and studies that purport to link every weather anomaly and event to man-made carbon emissions, on subsidized renewable-energy programs that displace food crops and kill wildlife, on “mitigation” measures against disasters that exist only in “scenarios” generated by computer models, and on welfare programs for people unemployed and impoverished by these policies.
They are also losing tens of billions of dollars in royalties and tax revenues they would receive if they were not blocking oil, gas and coal development and use. Hundreds of billions more is lost owing to manufacturing jobs lost because companies cannot compete in international marketplaces as a result of soaring electricity and transportation-fuel prices.
The European Union alone will pay $250 billion every year for 87 more years, because of its climate and renewable-energy policies, according to calculations by “skeptical environmentalist” Bjorn Lomborg. That’s $20 trillion by 2100 — all to achieve a reduction in average global temperatures by 0.1 degree Fahrenheit.
Under Obama administration policies and tutelage from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the United States is heading in the same direction. These ideologues are playing with people’s lives, livelihoods and living standards. They refuse to acknowledge that their scary forecasts are wrong, and they reject growing evidence that we do not face an imminent man-made climate disaster.
The Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change’s 2013 Climate Change Reconsidered report convincingly and systematically refutes claims that we need to take immediate, drastic action to prevent “unprecedented” climate and weather events that are no more frequent or unusual than what humans have adapted to for thousands of years.
STORY CONTINUES ----

www.dailymotion.com/video/x102hfb_asia-global-energy-asg-world-energy-hits-revenue-mark-but-loses-1m_news
www.youtube.com/watch?v=B5-WJz3Jmo8

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pagi

Asal Sunda Kenary 11 lat temu 0
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Switching tabs with the keyboard while using split-screen mode should wrap to the beginning of tabs for the split, not the entire window.

Andrew Brookins 13 lat temu Ostatnio zmodyfikowane przez Nithin Reddy 12 lat temu 1
E.g., if I'm using a two-column layout, and I want to (in OS X) Command-} to go from the first tab to the last tab, I'd prefer that it wrap to the last tab of the split. In Beta 2183, Command-} wraps me to the last tab of the farthest-right column (the second column, in two-column layout). 

I'm not sure if this is the intended behavior - if not, this is a bug. Otherwise, this is just an idea. Thanks!
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Naprawione

Redo should be cmd-shift-Z by default

chaiguy 13 lat temu Ostatnio zmodyfikowane przez Jon Skinner 13 lat temu 3
May be a bit of a religious war but I personally consider command-shift-Z as the better keystroke for redo, rather than command-Y. The Y key is nowhere near Z so it just doesn't feel right.
Odpowiedź
Jon Skinner 13 lat temu
Cmd+Shift+Z has always been bound to redo by default
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Invalid auto-indentation in "if" statement on C-like languages

David Capello 13 lat temu Ostatnio zmodyfikowane przez Ryan Park 13 lat temu 3

With the following code on C/C++/JavaScript/C-like languages: (note: _ is the cursor position)

  if (a == b ||
      c == d) _
If we press { and then ENTER key, we get:
if (a == b ||
    a == c) {
        _
    }

Which is invalid, we should get:

if (a == b ||
    a == c) {
    _
}

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Home Buyers: Lock in these Low Mortgage Rates Now

vurocolley 11 lat temu Ostatnio zmodyfikowane przez Kevian 11 lat temu 1
Mortgage rates are at an all-time low. Recent data released by Freddie Mac from 1972 through February 2013 illustrate just what historic times home buyers currently live in.

With the Federal Reserve purchasing $45 billion worth of longer-term Treasuries and $40 billion in mortgage-backed securities—for a total of $85 billion each month—30-year fixed rates have been driven down below 4.0% for the first time ever.

When large institutions buy large quantities of bonds—say $85 billion per month—bond prices are bid higher, which drives bond rates down (bond prices and rates are inversely related). And this is exactly what the Fed intends to do—push mortgage rates down to give relief to home buyers and make it possible to finance their next home.

This maneuver by the U.S. central bank is known as quantitative easing (QE) and is unprecedented in its scale. How much longer the Fed will make these monthly purchases is unknown. What is known, however, is that the Fed cannot continue this program indefinitely. Meaning at some point, these purchases will end and rates will normalize.

When will rates increase? How high will they go? How fast will they move? Nobody can predict exactly what rates will look like going forward.

But if you lock in a fixed rate today, you won’t have to worry where rates go tomorrow.

For more information: visit us!


Westhill Sample Rental House

498 - This Rambler Feels Like Home! | $1,750/mo. - 3 bd / 2.5 ba

36526 3rd Ave SW, Federal Way, WA 98023 | Welcome home to this sprawling rambler located in a secluded Federal Way neighborhood. This home has a large, bright kitchen with a large window to let the sun shine through. Off of the kitchen is a dining room with vaulted ceilings, a formal dining room, and a large living room with fireplace. Home also features a deck overlooking the property’s two acres, large grass yard, and pond!

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