On 19.02.2007, at 21:23, Charilaos Skiadas wrote:
Now when using escape in a cite scope, I get a spinning beach ball and I have to kill the command via Command-. . If I use Alt+Esc I also get the spinning beach ball and after killing the command I get this error message:
Sounds like it has trouble parsing the bib-file. Can you send me the offending bib file, and also try with a smaller/simpler bib file?
I sent you the file off list.
Another thing, which stopped working, is the template insertion command. When I write 'temp' and hit tab I get the following error:
sh: line 1: ls: command not found /tmp/temp_textmate.NvRU8j:14: undefined method
Hm, this is interesting. Seems to indicate some problem with your shell. The command that fails here is one trying to run "ls" from the command line.
This gives me the usual output. I have "alias ls='ls -lahFGp'" in my .bash_profile, so I get a detailed and colored output.
Try to type "ls" without the quotes in a line in a TM document, and press Ctrl-R to have it execute in shell. Do you get the same error?
This works. I get the usual output with each folder and file on one line: Applications Desktop DB Desktop DF Developer Library Network System Users Volumes automount bin cores dev etc mach mach.sym mach_kernel opt private sbin tmp usr var
What if you type "`ls`", i.e. ls surrounded by backticks, and run the "Execute Line As Ruby" command from the ruby bundle?
I get "SyntaxError"
What if you run ls from the terminal?
This is the same as running the command from the command line, isn't it?
Haris
Best. Oliver