I ran it just for the heck of it in Monterey on an M1 and nothing happened :

➜ run sudo opensnoop 2>/dev/null | grep TextMate

~

I use the Terminal (iTerm), but can’t say I understand what this line means.

But since returning to back to the shell prompt immediately on running the code, I wouldn’t expect anything to show up after opening TM.


On Feb 20, 2022, at 1:02 AM, Alain Matthes via TextMate <textmate@lists.macromates.com> wrote:

Hi,
I tried but I'm not very good with the terminal. What does : Look back at the terminal ? 
I didn't see anything but I probably didn't do the right thing.

I remember that I work with Monterey on a MacBook Air.
I uninstalled TextMate on a MacBook Pro with Catalina and after a manual search of the files, everything went well.
TM_ variables are removed
Alain


Le 20 févr. 2022 à 02:03, kyle.kirby@icloud.com a écrit :

I don’t have the answer, but you can use the opensnoop command from the terminal to see what files are used:
  • run sudo opensnoop 2>/dev/null | grep TextMate
  • Open TextMate
  • Look back at the terminal to see the files
Opensnoop is part of macos, no need to install any other software.
On Feb 19, 2022, 6:33 PM -0600, Alain Matthes via TextMate <textmate@lists.macromates.com>, wrote:
Hello,

I needed to reinstall TexMate but I was surprised to see some variables like TM_FULLNAME etc. still present
as well as the previously opened files?
Everytime I reinstall textmate I always go back with my previous settings.

~/Library/Application Support/Textmate
~/Library/Caches/ ….
~/Library/Preferences/ ….
~/Library/HTTPStorage/ ….

Where is this data stored?

What to do?

Thanks,
Alain
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