Is there a way to make the HTML output window autoscroll? For things
like RakeMate, it would be great if the window auto scrolled as new
content was added.
- LD.
Hello everyone,
I am working with the TextMate Subversion bundle and a German shell
localization (LC_ALL=de_DE.UTF-8). It turns out the commit result
window will always show 'unknown revision committed' in its title.
To fix that I put a copy of svn_commit.rb out of the Subversion
bundle's Support folder in ~/Application Support/TextMate/Bundles/
Subversion/Support/ and changed the regex in line 214 to the following:
http://pastie.textmate.org/89801
Hopefully this will catch other languages as well. Maybe someone
finds this useful, so I thought I would post it here.
cheers
Tibor Claassen
Hi all,
i am running TM Version 1.5.6 (1414) and have a question regarding memory use..
First, uname -a:
Darwin *.local 8.10.3 Darwin Kernel Version 8.10.3: Wed Jun 27 23:29:36 PDT 2007; root:xnu-792.23.3~1/RELEASE_I386 i386 i386
2.2 CD2 MacBook Pro
2 GB 667 Factory RAM
after opening text files of moderate size (10M-20M) for editing, applying the edits, and closing them, TM retains *lots* of memory (~ 285 MB Real). The memory is only released upon restarting the program. This can be reproduced simply by opening a large text file, closing it, and monitoring RAM usage (top/Activity Monitor).
My question boils down to whether or not this is the desired/expected behavior?
cheers,
brant
<*)
(_\\
_||
Hello,
a quote from the release notes from REVISION 1401:
> When TextMate bumps your encoding to UTF-8 it will first display a
> confirmation dialog (there is no help in finding which characters
> cause a problem though, but a bundle command can be devised)
Is there already such a bundle command anywhere?
Kind regards,
Tobias
Hello everybody,
First of all, I'm well aware of the ability to use column selections
instead of rows, so please don't respond with that. What I'd like to
be able to do is select a random bit of text here and another there,
no matter where they are in the document, and then be able to use cmd-
c to copy it and paste it to another section (perhaps separated by
line breaks to indicate that the text fragments are from non-
continuous selections). Kind of like the cmd key lets you do in some
other cocoa editors (like Pages). Any ideas?
Thanks,
Michael
Hi everyone,
I'm wondering if there was a mean to insert some kind of “informative
text” in a snippet, i.e. text that informs you of what should be
inserted where but disappears when it's not needed any longer.
Here's a short example (a method definition in some Lisp dialect) of
a problem I currently face that should make the situation a bit clearer.
Here is what I'd want to appear with my defmethod snippet, with
“normal” default text between [ ] and informative text between { } :
(defmethod [name] ({parameters}) ({code}))
The parameters are written as “(name type)”, so when I reach the
{parameters}, the first thing I do is adding a parenthesis. Result:
the default text (“parameters”) is still there, but now unselected
and between parenthesis. I thus have to remove it by hand, which is
quite annoying. Of course, a possibility is to let the default string
empty, but you can easily get lost in your structure, then
(especially in Lisp). So is there a way to have text reminding you
what you should be typing, but disappearing after a while (ideally,
when you hit tab in order to jump to the next snippet point or when
you reach $0)?
Thank you very much,
Édouard
Textmate is more sluggish lately for me than in the past. I notice it
when I switch from the terminal back to Textmate. TM takes a little
while to respond. Almost like it has to awakened from a good nap. At
least it isn't grumpy afterwards.
I'm running TextMate 1.5.6 (1414)
Anyone else notice this? Suggestions?
-David