> Will Allan see this thread if we keep it on this list? I’m sure he’s gotīetter things to work on, but I’d love to know how he’s thought about these > Is this the appropriate list for this conversation? In the background which isn’t really part of how bundles work.Ī good example to look at that we use is the SCM Diff Gutter bundle, this To do this properly we need a program running constantly Would activate for every single keypress which is just too much overheadįor general use. There is no option to monitor a document for changes in real time, doing so > If there isn’t a Semantic Class (or other hook) and there’s not a way toĪccess the current unsaved document, could there be? :D Seems to me that spell checking is already doing this, and maybe we could One? I’d then need a way to access the document’s unsaved contents. > Is there a Semantic Class that I’m just not finding, or could we create The only thing that seems to update without a save is spell checking. Gutter/marks API the front-end is ready for this. > My current issue is that Atom can lint in real time. > On Aug 18, 2016, at 8:23 PM, Graham Heath On Augat 2:58:31 PM, Michael Sheets (bundles(a)) That either launches a background process ("TMHinter-d" perhaps) orĪttaches to the existing background process. If I could get the "on change" event, I’d be happy to setup a node script Rather simple wrapper around ESLint that keeps the linter open in a ESLint-d is a daemon implementation of ESLint. The way Atom appears to be doing this "on change" event is by debouncing it since this seems to be growing into aįeature request, rather than a request for more information. What do others think about it? Should I enter the feature request in Remember in which desktop the windows were last opened and reproduce Terminal windows open in exactly the same desktop where they wereĬlosed, the web browser (Chrome) sadly doesn't respect that, about ButĪfter every reboot or TM upgrade, I need to sort the windows manually Number of desktops and I only reboot the OS about once in a month. I often have up to 100 files opened at the same time, spread across a What I miss in TextMate though is reopening the windows in the sameĭesktop where they were before closing the app. To reopen all the windows after any expected or unexpected events I absolutely love the feature introduced in TM 2 with Lion: being able If you know of such a set of examples, please point me to them (yes, I've looked). Of course it wouldn't be perfect for everyone, but it could be really helpful as a starting point. I'd definitely appreciate it.įor those (unfortunate souls) who are not familiar with Whitesmith:Īlso, just as a general suggestion, it seems like it would be really helpful to have just a handful of "packaged" example indentation rules for the small handful of common bracing styles, i.e. There's clearly something fundamental that I'm missing, but I've spent hours on this off and on over the past few months, and I'm guessing that someone who really understands the rules (and regex) better than I, could get me on the right path in short order. Now I've lost those old settings and for the life of me can't figure out how to get it even close in 2.0. I've used Whitesmith bracing style for *decades*, and had it kinda-sorta working in TM 1.5.x, though not perfectly. However, in Vim it is easy to keep your hands resting on your keyboard with your shoulders relaxed. It even hurts to have to move my hand down to the arrow keys. It hurts my right shoulder and shoulder blade. Multiple windows isn't really the same thing because they are slow to setup and tear down.Ģ) Selective multifile grep - in Vim you can use a regular expression to open a set of files, and then just grep across the open files.ģ) Don't need arrow keys - after years of editing with the mouse I find it painful to reach for it. Closing splits is about as easy as they are to create - all from the keyboard. I found that it is very handy when needing to view more than 1 file at a time, which in my case is most of the time. When you split, Vim divides the space up for you which is what you want most of the time. Additionally, you don't have to reach for your mouse to create a split. In Vim you can easily navigate from the keyboard to your different splits and choose what files to display in each. Recently I spent some time learning Vim and I discovered a few things that I particularly liked.ġ) Split windows - not the kind of split windows you normally get in Mac applications, but the Vim style ones. However, I like to try other editors from time to time to see if I'm missing anything. I've been using TextMate for years and I'm productive and happy with it.
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