On 18.07.2008, at 03:54, Thomas Aylott / subtleGradient wrote:
Would you want us to submit updates to it directly or should we talk to you first?
If you have access to it, please go ahead. I'll see your commits.
First thoughts from the screencast: Totally awesome! Where can I get that keystroke showing thing?
I'm using KeyCastr.app http://www.macupdate.com/download.php/23072/keycastr_0.7.3.dmg
The drawer should open from the bottom.
Which drawer?
The logs should be stored in the standard logs folder ~/Library/Logs
Yes, I agree. But the log will be replace any time you invoke that GetBundles command. That's why I thought it would fit better to store it within the bundle.
Your screencast is a bit washed out and everything seems very white.
White? Do yo mean the background? It was only to hide stuff at my desktop ;)
The layout of the window could use a bit of cleanup. (I'd be happy to submit alternate layout ideas)
Go ahead ;)
'user defined' Installation Target should default to the ~/Downloads folder or the Desktop
Yes, this a good point. One could add two items to the installation target pop down menu: Users Desktop and Users Download
This would mean one can avoid the File Chooser ;)
Have you seen the Firefox 3 add-on window? I think that has a wonderful UI, but maybe not ideal for this. Thoughts?
Well, this is nice. I tried to use a NSOutLineView to show the repositories in a tree- like structure. That worked but I wasn't able to implement a live search to that tree. That's why I went back to use tables instead. But one could build a GUI à la Firefox Add-in, meaning one has at the top buttons or a toolbar with: All repositories, Macromates Bundles, Macromates Review, GitHub
If one clicks at a button the script would replace the table content accordingly.
In addition to that one could also add buttons like: Themes, Plugins, etc.
(assuming it actually works ;) This is a HUGE step forward for the TextMate community!
Hopefully, if it works stable ;)
On 18.07.2008, at 07:46, Michael Sheets wrote:
Just doing a quick glance over the bundle, I guess it's nice to support Tiger but is worth adding the 4MB svn executable to do so? Would make it smaller and avoid any versions issues to leave it out.
This is a good point. But you cannot expect that each user has svn installed. I looked for a way to install a bundle without using svn but I only found the way by downloading each single file separately. github provides a tarball or zipball but the svn repositories don't. Or is there a more tiny svn client available for free on the market?
Cheers,
--Hans