Good day to all!
TextMate is heavenly; a beautiful and logical application that just gets better and better. It would be so, so nice though if the find in project dialogue had larger text boxes. For large scale, web site wide changes, it would be utterly convenient to have some room to work with large blocks of code.
Allan, THANK YOU!
happy and registered addict,
Matt Erker
Web Developer TOKY Branding + Design
On 8/17/05, Matthew Erker matt@toky.com wrote:
It would be so, so nice though if the find in project dialogue had larger text boxes. For large scale, web site wide changes, it would be utterly convenient to have some room to work with large blocks of code.
how abou making the find dialogue to be a resizable window? The dropdown menu can become a button next to search field.
On 19/08/2005, at 7.54, Ivan wrote:
It would be so, so nice though if the find in project dialogue had larger text boxes. [...]
how abou making the find dialogue to be a resizable window?
I also need to switch input control, so that return inserts a return (with the current input boxes one needs to use option return) -- I do have on my to-do that there should be some sort of toggle button/ unfold arrow to switch between single-line/multi-line.
Until then, for those who are unaware, cmd-E copies the selection to the find clipboard, so one can write the find string in the main text editor, select it, and press cmd-E (cmd-G can be used to find the string currently on the find clipboard).
On Aug 21, 2005, at 11:23 PM, Allan Odgaard wrote:
On 19/08/2005, at 7.54, Ivan wrote:
It would be so, so nice though if the find in project dialogue had larger text boxes. [...]
how abou making the find dialogue to be a resizable window?
I also need to switch input control, so that return inserts a return (with the current input boxes one needs to use option return) -- I do have on my to-do that there should be some sort of toggle button/unfold arrow to switch between single-line/multi-line.
Until then, for those who are unaware, cmd-E copies the selection to the find clipboard, so one can write the find string in the main text editor, select it, and press cmd-E (cmd-G can be used to find the string currently on the find clipboard).
The feature i use the absolute most in the system is cmd-E cmd-G, it's like using your current document like a wiki. You wont to step through every instance of your selection in the document? done! bam- bam-bam. back.
On 8/21/05, Allan Odgaard allan@macromates.com wrote:
Until then, for those who are unaware, cmd-E copies the selection to the find clipboard, so one can write the find string in the main text editor, select it, and press cmd-E (cmd-G can be used to find the string currently on the find clipboard).
Thanks for the tip. I didn't even notice that. Sometimes I wonder what can I miss such obvious thing.
Until then, for those who are unaware, cmd-E copies the selection to the find clipboard, so one can write the find string in the main text editor, select it, and press cmd-E (cmd-G can be used to find the string currently on the find clipboard).
Indeed, this is handsome!
An amazing thing I found out by accident is that cmd-E works across applications! So you can have some text lying around in Stickies, select it and press cmd-E, then go over to TextMate and press cmd-G. And still have the regular clipboard for cmd-V pasting in the same go!
It's really a shared clipboard! While I thought it was a nicety of each app...
Peter