mediasraka.blogg.se

Ultraedit color schemes
Ultraedit color schemes










ultraedit color schemes
  1. ULTRAEDIT COLOR SCHEMES HOW TO
  2. ULTRAEDIT COLOR SCHEMES SOFTWARE
  3. ULTRAEDIT COLOR SCHEMES MAC

> Where's a proper autocompletion in the shell that behaves like in a native app? Why and how would a terminal support JSON? What are those ad-hoc desktop things? > no support for a structured type (e.g JSON), ad-hoc implementations for lots of things given in the desktop. > Bad support for millions of colors, bad support for Unicode, Users are mostly happy developers don't care. You can wait till 22nd century it probably still won't happen. My comment about waiting was with respect to vim/emacs(as examples of other open source editors). Plenty of other developers live in your "22th century" and offer nice and functional native editors already. "Only if it looked shiny" is very low on todo list of vim/emacs users/developers. When you mentioned open source editors catching up, it isn't going to happen because your requirements are not universal. The overwhelming majority of vim/emacs developers use it in a terminal, and are pretty happy with it.

ultraedit color schemes

> The overwhelming majority of developers edits in a GUI editor though, be it in Visual Studio, XCode, IntelliJ, Eclipse or Vim / Emacs / TextMate / ST2 etc. I mean tmux/screen borking the scroll buffer? Is this 2013? Only ZSH and Fish tried a few things to take us further, but still very short of what a desktop could be. Where's a proper autocompletion in the shell that behaves like in a native app? Where's spell checking with wiggle lines? Because most of the components are crappy old time things, from terminal emulators to userland unix commands, etc.īad support for millions of colors, bad support for Unicode, no support for a structured type (e.g JSON), ad-hoc implementations for lots of things given in the desktop. I don't mind the terminal (I use one everyday and have done so since the day's Sun OS was SUN's offering), but it's also another technology stuck in the past. > You can wait till 22nd century, but as long as your definition of 21st century isn't the same as developers definition, not much is going to happen. The overwhelming majority of developers edits in a GUI editor though, be it in Visual Studio, XCode, IntelliJ, Eclipse or Vim / Emacs / TextMate / ST2 etc. > Though both vim and emacs have gui interfaces, most of the users use them inside a terminal.

ULTRAEDIT COLOR SCHEMES SOFTWARE

ST2 is the best investment I have made in software apart from open source. Keybindings: tons of customizations to suit what I am used to and work across all OS's the fantastic thing with this setup is that in any new machines, Package Control will automatically take care of installing any missing plugins

ULTRAEDIT COLOR SCHEMES MAC

in Mac OSX/Linux goto the Packages folder (you can find the location under >Preferences>Browse Preferences) and enter: ln -s pathto/Dropbox/Sublime\ Text\ 2/User. in Win goto CMD and from the %APPDATA%\Sublime Text 2\Packages folder enter: mklink /D "User" "path to\My Dropbox\ST2\User" move the /User folder under "Sublime Text 2/Packages" over to Dropbox/ST2/User Next step sync config files over Dropbox to get exactly the same editing environment from Win, Mac, and Linux Package Control plugin: the very first thing you should setup after installing ST2 (it should really be a part of ST2) Why I love ST2: multi-platform, fuzzy search, plugins, multiple cursors, JSON config files.

ULTRAEDIT COLOR SCHEMES HOW TO

I guess I should learn how to read HN with it, next. In this capacity, ST2 has mastered my needs for integrated development. hit alt-R, the MOAI app runs, its great, I commit to repo, the buildserver builds and runs the very same app on the nexus7, iphone5, pandora, osx, linux desktops, and various other sundry devices around the place. Right now in space-cadet mode, hacking on a laptop in some cafe, I sit in SublimeText2. ST2, for MOAI and the Lua language, actually is really a sublime IDE experience, and imho the word sublime can be applied to this experience: I am using the same editor on both editor'ish platforms (osx, linux), and then building an app with its own language/VM wordspace that runs on.

ultraedit color schemes

well I've come to really love the editor, like love it, but am a vim user, 100%, and often get sad when I switch back and forth. I have been using ST2 for a long time now as an editor for MOAI, in which facility it really works well and. Well, all this fun talk of SublimeText2, and my. Pfft, you had blue? ) I was happy to finally, one day, have a CURSOR! Oh crap, it blinks! Wow, high tech type!












Ultraedit color schemes