Hi,
seems odd, but I really do not know what marks are and how to set them (and
how many)? It seems related to the keybinding setMark.
In the latest release version 2.0-beta.9.1 the jump to next/previous mark
shortcuts have been changed to F3/⇧F3. So I was wondering how to set them ;)
and what is the difference with bookmarks?
regards,
feek
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Ah, thank you very much for that input. I will resend there.
On 4/18/16, 3:21 PM, "Jacob Carlborg" <textmate-dev-bounces+jjbernitt=gmail.com(a)lists.macromates.com on behalf of doob(a)me.com> wrote:
>On 2016-04-18 12:12, Joshua Bernitt wrote:
>> Hey all!
>>
>> I think this is the correct mailing list for this question;
>
>I recommend the general mailing list instead. There's barely any traffic
>at all in this mailing list.
>
>--
>/Jacob Carlborg
>
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>textmate-dev mailing list
>textmate-dev(a)lists.macromates.com
>http://lists.macromates.com/listinfo/textmate-dev
Hello
I use a lot of variables with @ in their names like
\rput@temp but a double-click on \rput@temp selects only
rput or temp. With TM1 I had the possibilities to
change but how can I do with TM2?
Thanks,
Best Regards,
Alain
Hi everyone,
I want to fold the following 'code'
# Section 1 ----
for (i in 1:30) {
y = i+1
}
# Section 2 ----
# a comment
x = y + 1
y = y^2
if (foo) {
a = b
for (j in 1:3) {
b = b + 1
}
}
# Section 3 ----
b = c
to fold in the following way:
- "sections" in the code are defined by #something----, everything
between two section titles should fold when the folding marker of the
title line is clicked
- blocks are defined with { (and a few other markers) and should fold
as expected.
With the following rules I can almost make it work
{
foldingStartMarker = '\{';
foldingStopMarker = '\}';
foldingIndentedBlockStart = '^#(.*?)\-{4,}';
foldingIndentedBlockIgnore = '^(?!#(.*?)\-{4,})';
}
the blocks fold, respecting nesting, the sections fold up to the next
section, *except* for section 1; there, the `for` block is not
indented and is at the same level as the section, therefore folding at
section 1 only folds until the start of the for block, not all the way
down to section 2.
It looks like I am searching for a way to the `foldingIndentedBlock`
rule to take precedence over the `foldingStartMarker` rule. Is it
possible?
To make it easy to take a stab at it, I created a new bundle and a
test file (the language is "testing") which you can get there:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1047321/Test.zip
PS: having comments which define sections in the code seems like a
general use case. The syntax is in that particular example is defined
in the R language by the RStudio IDE. This IDE is becoming common
enough that I am receiving code formatted this way a lot.
Thanks in advance for your help!
Good day,
I am interested in assisting with TextMate development. I really like the editor, and want to contribute to make it better! I want to help add newer and more modern actions to it similar to Sublime Text. I was wondering if you had any links for getting started? I’ve downloaded the source code and set up a dev environment and can compile it successfully. I’m reading through the source code and testing things; I was just wondering if you have any information on the Oak framework and the general layout of the application structure. Thank you for your help!
--Â
Josh Bernitt
Sent with Airmail
I was thinking that the context menu that shows up when you press
keyboard shortcut for a bundle command that is overloaded (multiple
commands for a single keyboard shortcut) can be quite long, especially
for the git commands.
What if we (I or someone) adds a text input field to the menu which
filters the menu items. And example of this can be found in Xcode [1].
Would that be a good idea?
[1] http://blog.manbolo.com/2012/05/24/filtered1.png
--
/Jacob Carlborg
I've been working for quite a while with trying to rewrite the grammar
for the D bundle to be more accurate to the official grammar. The
grammar for D is quite complex, that in the combination with the syntax
for grammars in TextMate doesn't allow any good ways to reuse or compose
rules making it very difficult to describe a grammar. I know it's
possible to reuse rules with the repository, but that seems to be mostly
useful when matching with "begin" and "end".
For example, this is the grammar for a function declaration from the
official D grammar:
FuncDeclaration:
StorageClasses(opt) BasicType FuncDeclarator FunctionBody
AutoFuncDeclaration
AutoFuncDeclaration:
StorageClasses Identifier FuncDeclaratorSuffix FunctionBody
FuncDeclarator:
BasicType2(opt) Identifier FuncDeclaratorSuffix
FuncDeclaratorSuffix:
Parameters MemberFunctionAttributes(opt)
TemplateParameters Parameters MemberFunctionAttributes(opt)
Constraint(opt)
Each of these parts/rules of the grammar consists of several other
rules, many levels deep.
It would be really nice if the TextMate grammar syntax allowed, somehow,
to define rules, or parts of a rule, which the other rules can be
composed of, similar to above.
Or is there a way to already do something similar with the current syntax?
--
/Jacob Carlborg
Hi,
I am a PhD student in final year and using Latex in TextMate for last 5-6
months to write my work, and I really like Textmate. I recently graduated
to use Sweave to include R elements into my Latex document.
However, I am unable to setup Sweave to compile and I get error : pdf file
not written to disk. I have tried advice on
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lang.r.mac/3953/match=sweave+pdf+file+n…
but no luck.
I am using Textmate 2.0-beta.9, with Texlive 2015 distribution and R 3.2.3
Please can anyone guide me to setup Sweave for Textmate. Yes, I have
installed Sweave Bundle.
Thank you.
Sri