Is there a keyboard shortcut to switch the 'Select Bundle Item' window
(control+command+t) from 'Item title' to 'Key equivalent' and back? This is
usually accomplished by using the mouse to click the magnifying glass.
However I'd prefer to not use the mouse if I can help it.
Anyone?
Thanks
Brandon
I looked into Doodim, it doesn't support even Snow Leopard from what I
remember, and they said they lost the source code. Oopsie. If you get it
working, please let us know.
Brandon
Hello,
I post this question a while back but had no answer... Is it one of those RTFM question or did it slip through the cracks? Can someone point me to the right direction if so on how to accomplishsuch t a thing??
Thank you in advance.
Best
John
----------------------------------------------------
I've seen some bundles do that but I can't figure out the way to accomplish this. In the language that I am working on I have variables and arrays etc...
Is there a way that I can have a variable declared with a $ symbol and then have it custom colored every time any word has the $symbol in front? Something like declare $variable
declare %array[] so every time these variables appear in the script they would be a certain(assignable) color and a different color for the %array?. Thank you. Best,
John
Hi,
... I'm new to the list, so please forgive me if this is a big "yes-we-all-know-that-already".
I have replaced my old machine with a new big iMac and upgraded to Lion. Now I have the console log filled all over the place with tons of messages like this one:
28.07.2011 6:18:29.046 PM TextMate NSDocumentController Info.plist warning: The values of CFBundleTypeRole entries must be 'Editor', 'Viewer', 'None', or 'Shell'.
I checked the file /Applications/TextMate.app/Contents/Resources/Info.plist:
$ pwd
/Applications/TextMate.app
$ find . -type f -exec grep -il cfbundletyperole {} \;
./Contents/Resources/Info.plist
$ cd Contents/Resources/
$ pwd
/Applications/TextMate.app/Contents/Resources
$ grep -i cfbundletyperole *
Info.plist: CFBundleTypeRole = Editor;
Info.plist: CFBundleTypeRole = Editor;
Info.plist: CFBundleTypeRole = Editor;
Info.plist: CFBundleTypeRole = Editor;
Info.plist: CFBundleTypeRole = Editor;
Info.plist: CFBundleTypeRole = Editor;
Info.plist: CFBundleTypeRole = Editor;
Info.plist: CFBundleTypeRole = Editor;
My installed TextMate is version 1.5.10 (1631).
So, all is "Editor" as the NSDocumentController requested. What's wrong here? Does anybody have an idea? What can I do?
Thanks very much in advance.
--
cul8er
Paul
paul.foerster(a)gmx.net
Hey everyone. Apologies if this has been covered to death, but I use
TextMate to do PHP development, and I'm frustrated by the autoindentation: I
use spaces instead of tabs and the autoindent will put N number of spaces
for the empty line rather than just a new line.
Is there either an addition to the PHP bundle or a standalone bundle itself
that can clean this up for me?
--
Wells Oliver
wellsoliver(a)gmail.com
In my opinion, the full screen of the app pages is well implemented. It is
almost like write room. Is it possible to have a similar implementation of
the Lion full screen in Textmate?
--
View this message in context: http://old.nabble.com/Lion-Full-Screen-tp32153117p32153117.html
Sent from the textmate users mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
I'm not sure which command you are originally referring to, but this is
pretty easy to just whip up in the bundle editor (thank you, TextMate!).
Create a new snippet. You can name the snippet whatever, and assign it to
whatever keyboard shortcut. Just make sure to put 'text.html' in the 'Scope
Selector' field. This will make sure the keyboard shortcut only activates
when you are in an HTML document*.
So, here is the snippet:
<a href="$1">$TM_SELECTED_TEXT</a>
Just paste that into the bundle editor window (get rid of any extra
whitespace), close the bundle editor, and baby you got a stew goin'!
Highlight some text and press your keyboard shortcut to make a new anchor.
The caret will be in the quotes where the $1 is.
* More correctly, it will be active when the caret is in a scope of
text.html. You can check the scope at any time by using a keyboard
shortcut, but I think it's disabled by default. To enable it, click the
'Filter List...' button near the bottom of the bundle editor, and click the
checkbox by the bundle titled 'Bundle Development'. Once that is enabled,
press control+shift+p to see a tooltip with the scope hierarchy in it.
There's documentation about this stuff on the TextMate site if you are
interested in learning more.
@Gerd: Dear God, thank you. I have been keeping an eye out for the
'standard' location of PlistBuddy for a while now, since it seems to pop up
in the most random spots. Such a fantastically useful tool that I could
never find when I needed it.
@Allan: Thanks for just mentioning TextMate 2. :) It gives us all a sigh
of relief to know it's still out there. I'm sure I'm not the only one who
feels this way: TextMate opened my eyes. The elegance, the simplicity, the
flexibility, the power. I just fell in love. So when our exuberance gets
bothersome, just smile a little. We are just in love with your creation,
and love makes anyone a little crazy and goofy.
For some reason, this HTML snippet/shortcut does not work for me:
Wrap Selection as Link (⌃⇧L) — this turns the selection into link text for
an anchor where you can then fill in the URL.
Is it still available? Have I screwed up my config and lost it?! Or has it
been deprecated?
At the least, I'd like an easy way to create anchors in TM. Is there one
I'm missing? I looked in the Bundle Editor.
Thanks!
-- Owen