Name: Bob Moisan
Email: bob(a)intelligentlighting.com
Company: Intelligent Lighting Creations
Phone: 847.982.2070
Comments: I was wondering if you can create a website using the
Sprite graphics on my Commodore 64?
I've seen on the list these last couple of days mention of problems
with Tiger. I have it now and was planning to upgrade today. I'm
using beta 5.
It TextMate functional under Tiger? What problems can I expect?
Thanks.
James Edward Gray II
Trying a checkout of the bundles raises here
A Bundles/Subversion.tmbundle/Commands/Add to Repository.plist
subversion/libsvn_subr/utf.c:363: (apr_err=22)
svn: Can't recode string
having LC_TYPE set to "en_US.UTF-8" as the wiki says. Looks like the
checkout is interrupted because XML and Perl are missing for example.
I did a search in Google and found a message from Eric Hsu with a
similar problem. Any ideas?
-- fxn
Hi Allan,
is there any chance that future betas (b8?) will include the bundles
again? I'm ›finkless‹ since the Tiger upgrade and don't like the
thought of installing unixoid command line tools (ie. the svn client
in this case) ›outside‹ of Fink. Thanks!
Christian
I've always modified the default keybindings in TextMate to change ^f
to moveForward rather than reformat paragraph. Since converting to
Tiger this hasn't worked very well.
The binding seems to work as moveForward in files that I open in
standalone windows. Not part of a project. But if a file is part of
a project the old reformat paragraph behavior comes back.
For example I have:
dijkstra.tex as part of a project
when I try navigate using ^f in the file dijkstra.tex file opened
inside the project all I get is reformat paragraph.
If I open dijkstra.tex all by itself ^f works as desired.
Is anyone else seeing anything like this?
Brad
Brad Miller, PhD
Assistant Professor
Luther College
http://www.cs.luther.edu/~bmiller
jabber: bnmnetp(a)jabber.org
Before I re-installed Tiger and installed Textmate I was able to call
'tm' from command line and it worked perfectly... now it does not
open tm unless I pass something to it... is that the way it is
suppose to work?
I don't know if TextMate supports read-only documents or not, but I
would like to be able to specify a custom view filter for a given
document in my project that produced a read-only text or html file in
place of the document's content that automatically displayed as a
normal project tab. The document in the tab view should have all of the
TextMate-specific features of a normal Commmand output window (e.g. go
to line, etc.)
Use Cases
---------
TextMate doesn't allow you to view jpegs, which is fine. But if I could
define a filter to run on selection that produced HTML output, I could
not only view the jpeg in the tab, but I could list statistics about
the file (size, dimensions, etc.) that I could either just read or
select and copy-and-past somewhere else in my project.
Viewing object files using the output from otool would also be handy,
particularly with the go-to feature and the ability to convert to (more
attractive) html output.
Man pages are another option. Define a blank file "xcodebuild.man" and
include it in your project hierarchy, setting a project-wide .man
filter to the output from Bwana (which does html man pgae output). Now
you can just click on (or tab to) the man page to read it, without
having an extra window pop-up or having to execute a command.
Custom UIs embedded in TextMate are another huge opportunity. Define a
Project.build_ui file and filter through something that generates an
HTML page that nicely renders all of your build options, along with
some handy buttons to initiate a build, view the last build results (in
an embedded HTML scroll view, whose lines have standard Command go-to
line behavior), etc. The customization possibilities for TextMate are
endless.
An embedded Subversion UI is another option.
An embedded Trac page is another. The possibilities are endless.
The key thing is that the filter is *automatic*. This makes it appear
in a tab just like any other built-in TextMate feature as far as the
user is concerned. This builds on the existing Command...
infrastructure Allan's already built.
UI Implementation
-----------------
Select file in Project browser and choose "Filter through Script...".
Up pops a dialog similar to the Command editor dialog. Extra options
include: update when source changes, update on view, and update first
time only.
Project-wide options would allow you to assign filters to extensions
automatically (e.g. .jpg).
Any comments or suggestions are welcome.
Best, Erich
On 02-05-2005, at 19:43, Erich Ocean wrote:
> Saw this over at daringfireball.net[1]:
>> NSTextView — the default text editing control in Cocoa apps — has
>> been significantly upgraded [in Tiger]. You can do discontinuous
>> selections with Command-drag, and column selections with Option-
>> drag. You can use these new selection gestures in most Cocoa apps —
>> including in textarea fields in Safari and any other app that uses
>> Web Kit. (Thanks to Quentin Carnicelli.)
> It's nice to see Cocoa's text support improving, even though it's not
> up to the level of Allan's work.
Actually, it [column mode selection] seems useless in NSTextView since
it doesn't paste back in column mode. Kinda like BBEdit did theirs I
think.
--
Sune.
On 02-05-2005 13:52, Ollivier Robert wrote:
> According to Brian Lalor:
>
>>take this time, however, to make sure everyone's aware of DarwinPorts.
>>For reasons I completely forget, now, I've preferred DarwinPorts to
>>Fink since I started using OS X.
>
>
> You have the same differences as between Debian and FreeBSD (no flame
> intended): more reactivity, more up-to-date packages and preference for
> source-to-be-compiled packages.
Also big plus for me is making *really* sure that it will not tamper with
other files than the one it installs itself.
I found this great guide [1] to install DarwinPorts under a special ports
user, which only has rights to the directory where it is supposed to
install stuff and nowhere else.
I was always doubting about Fink or DP and chose Fink for it's point and
click interface, that turned out to be horrible, but worked most of the
time. Now that I'm on Tiger, I'll switch to DP if I have time..
Jeroen.
[1] http://www.phil.uu.nl/~js/blog/2004/02/17#darwinports
--
<http://www.je-ju.net/~jeroen/blog/>