I'm on my third attempt on switching from TM1, but this time it's actually going pretty smooth. One thing has me stumped though, there's no keyboard shortcut for Replace & Find? I checked the commit history and it was reassigned to Replace in f39ac28, leaving Replace & Find shortcutless. There doesn't seem to be many options left for F and G (is there a way to bring up a list of all active bindings?), but adding one for Replace & Find would make my life a lot easier.
Thanks,
You can add keybindings for menu items yourself through System Preferences: https://support.apple.com/kb/PH21534?locale=en_US
HTH, -Martin
On 22 February 2017 at 15:47, Per Olofsson magervalp@fastmail.fm wrote:
I'm on my third attempt on switching from TM1, but this time it's actually going pretty smooth. One thing has me stumped though, there's no keyboard shortcut for Replace & Find? I checked the commit history and it was reassigned to Replace in f39ac28, leaving Replace & Find shortcutless. There doesn't seem to be many options left for F and G (is there a way to bring up a list of all active bindings?), but adding one for Replace & Find would make my life a lot easier.
Thanks,
-- Per Olofsson magervalp@fastmail.fm
textmate mailing list textmate@lists.macromates.com http://lists.macromates.com/listinfo/textmate
On Wed, Feb 22, 2017, at 11:49 AM, Martin Kühl wrote:
You can add keybindings for menu items yourself through System Preferences: https://support.apple.com/kb/PH21534?locale=en_US
Thanks, yes, I'm aware of that, and it's my current workaround. However I regularly switch between several workstations, and I prefer to keep customization to a minimum.
What does that mean? Whatever you do would have to be done on each computer, no matter what the mechanism was. m.
On Feb 22, 2017, at 12:50 PM, Per Olofsson magervalp@fastmail.fm wrote:
Thanks, yes, I'm aware of that, and it's my current workaround. However I regularly switch between several workstations, and I prefer to keep customization to a minimum.
-- matt neuburg, phd = http://www.apeth.net/matt/ pantes anthropoi tou eidenai oregontai phusei Programming iOS 10! http://shop.oreilly.com/product/0636920055235.do iOS 10 Fundamentals! http://shop.oreilly.com/product/0636920055211.do RubyFrontier! http://www.apeth.com/RubyFrontierDocs/default.html
It means please add it to TextMate 😀 On Thu, 23 Feb 2017 at 01:31, Matt Neuburg matt@tidbits.com wrote:
What does that mean? Whatever you do would have to be done on each computer, no matter what the mechanism was. m.
On Feb 22, 2017, at 12:50 PM, Per Olofsson magervalp@fastmail.fm
wrote:
Thanks, yes, I'm aware of that, and it's my current workaround. However I regularly switch between several workstations, and I prefer to keep customization to a minimum.
-- matt neuburg, phd = http://www.apeth.net/matt/ pantes anthropoi tou eidenai oregontai phusei Programming iOS 10! http://shop.oreilly.com/product/0636920055235.do iOS 10 Fundamentals! http://shop.oreilly.com/product/0636920055211.do RubyFrontier! http://www.apeth.com/RubyFrontierDocs/default.html
textmate mailing list textmate@lists.macromates.com http://lists.macromates.com/listinfo/textmate
Am 2017-02-23 um 8.59 schrieb George McGinley Smith george@gsgd.co.uk:
It means please add it to TextMate 😀
I second that.
On Thu, 23 Feb 2017 at 01:31, Matt Neuburg matt@tidbits.com wrote: What does that mean? Whatever you do would have to be done on each computer, no matter what the mechanism was. m.
On Feb 22, 2017, at 12:50 PM, Per Olofsson magervalp@fastmail.fm wrote:
Thanks, yes, I'm aware of that, and it's my current workaround. However I regularly switch between several workstations, and I prefer to keep customization to a minimum.
… mit freundlichem Gruß aus Ladenburg:
-Moss- -- Martin Wilhelm Leidig, SatzTeXnik -- Dante e.V. #1580
On Thu, Feb 23, 2017, at 10:36 PM, Allan Odgaard wrote:
On 23 Feb 2017, at 14:59, George McGinley Smith wrote:
It means please add it to TextMate 😀
But using what key equivalent?
Is there a way of getting a definitive list of all active keyboard shortcuts? As far as I can tell the only free ones are:
⌃⇧⌘F ⌃⌥⌘G ⇧⌥⌘F ⇧⌥⌘G
With my short fingers they're all two handed, but I find ⌃⌥⌘G is by far the easiest to type.
Personally I use Replace & Find a lot more than I see myself using Find All, and I'd argue for giving back Replace & Find ⌥⌘F and relegating Find All to something like ⌃⇧⌘F, but that's largely colored by my recent switch from TM1.
Am 2017-02-24 um 9.40 schrieb Per Olofsson magervalp@fastmail.fm:
On Thu, Feb 23, 2017, at 10:36 PM, Allan Odgaard wrote:
On 23 Feb 2017, at 14:59, George McGinley Smith wrote:
It means please add it to TextMate 😀
But using what key equivalent?
Is there a way of getting a definitive list of all active keyboard shortcuts?
There is a tool named KeyCue showing at least menu shortcuts, see http://www.ergonis.com/products/keycue/. Not quite what you asked but sometimes useful.
As far as I can tell the only free ones are:
⌃⇧⌘F ⌃⌥⌘G ⇧⌥⌘F ⇧⌥⌘G
It should be some G-combi, \me thinks. Imho, all Find operations should be something with “F”, and Replace, being the logically next op, something with “G”.
With my short fingers they're all two handed, but I find ⌃⌥⌘G is by far the easiest to type.
Just tried it: I can perform both G combis with one hand, if need be, but ⇧⌥⌘G needs far less muscle tension than ⌃⌥⌘G. Two-handed, there’s almost no difference, so I’d opt for shift-opt-cmd-G.
… mit freundlichem Gruß aus Ladenburg:
-Moss- -- Martin Wilhelm Leidig, SatzTeXnik -- Dante e.V. #1580