Scripsit Eric O'Brien diē 3.5.2006 6:58:
On May 2, 2006, at 5:16 PM, Alain Ravet wrote:
James
[using ^-<]
Changing an already existing pair of tags (i.e. one not just inserted using ^-<) only works for me using Home and End keys, as suggested in Duane's screencast and provided in his bundle advertised yesterday… Is that what you are looking for, Alain?
It did, thanks (for 1. I pressed control-<, no shift)
Technically, you can't really press the "<" without also pressing the shift key, as "<" is a shifted comma (as it were). At least on US/ English keyboards. So I'm not really sure what keys you were pressing there!
That is: "^-<" is the same as "^-shift-," [On my keyboard, anyway]
On my keyboard, ^-shift-< means ^->, because on a German keyboard, "<" is on the additional key found on (most? all?) European keyboards.
(This is a problem with some few TextMate mappings; especially mappings with the [shift and] option key can be annoying if one regularly uses the special characters that can be produced this way. But fortunately nobody has come up with the idea of standardly mapping something to Opt-l = @ or Opt-e = €! For the same reason, any mapping containing something like Opt-\ doesn't work: Opt-Shift-7 => Opt-/ or Shift-| => . Sorry for the digression.)
[...]
Just after the part where Allan's movie show's div => DIV => div you can hear him say
"Then I can tab into the body of this tag..."
... and tab back, Shift-Tab on my keyboard ;-), to change the just inserted enclosing tags. Very nice, indeed. Why is it restricted to text.html in the "official" bundle, because it might make sense for text.xml etc., too?
Cheers, Bernhard