right, p is the default for ctrl-<. I guess I was speaking from a workflow point of view. if I'm writing html it's nicer (for me) to be able to type p, a, span, etc and just hit tab to keep going, rather than have to think, minimally I know, about what the other hotkey it is. Even if that is a bit of a weak argument, having multiple ways to get to the same command (tab, hotkey, select bundle item, actually going to the menu) like creating a p tag is far from a new idea.
anyway, nice to know I wasn't missing something with those tab completions, I'll just have to add them.
On Dec 29, 2006, at 12:08 PM, Charilaos Skiadas wrote:
On Dec 29, 2006, at 5:32 PM, Matt Zollinhofer wrote:
You mentioned that at the end of the screencast he did just what you wanted to do. It looks like he was using tab completion on ul and li. Which is a question I have, I don't have those tab completions in the HTML bundle. Does everyone just create them for themselves or am I missing? I kind of expected these tab completions that aren't there: p, a, span, ul, and li. Any thoughts?
well, p is the default at ctrl-<, so not really worth a snippet. a I think is worth a snippet, but no idea why it's not there. Of course there are a couple of automatic link creation commands, for instance by dragging most files into the html document (for relative links), there's "wrap selection as link", and "Lookup selection on google and link". I think there is a "span" snippet, or perhaps it is something I added? As for ul and li, there is the "links to unnumbered list" command. I haven't watched that screencast for a while, so I don't know if this is what it uses.
Matt
Haris
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