Allan Odgaard wrote:
On 30. Jul 2007, at 22:26, Dushan Mitrovich wrote:
Where do you see the `-`? The `-` in the lower right side is a symbol list. The column is just next to the `Line: xx` on the lower left. If you open a new document, you should see "Line: 1 Column: 1" (assuming you open a new document wihtout any templates.
What I see is this: "Line: 1 Column: _", followed by a pale vertical bar, followed by a pale colored disk with the white letter "L".
And this is even when you place the caret in the upper left corner, i.e. at column one?
Yes, even then.
<snip>
I’ll update the manual. This command is gone. But there is a “Create HTML From Document” which you can run, Show Web Preview (Window menu) and then print from there.
If you do this a lot, you can go to the bundle editor and change the output for the command to Show as HTML and give it a key equivalent. Then printing (colored) is just two keys instead of one.
Okay, I'll try that.
BTW, I'd like to thank you and compliment you for the clarity of your instructions (to someone else, earlier) on how to get the 'End' and 'Home' keys to work as in the non-OSX world. Since I much prefer the keyboard to the mouse, these instructions were a treat. I notice, tho, that there are still some apps that disregard that, such as in Firefox and Thunderbird. I suppose their structure is too different to notice the key mapping.
- Dushan
There is a great patch available to fix the home and end keys in firefox. It's made me a much less disgruntled Mac switcher.
http://www.starryhope.com/tech/2007/keyfixer-firefox-version/
John
On 8/1/07 10:41 AM, "Dushan Mitrovich" dushanm@spinn.net wrote:
Allan Odgaard wrote:
On 30. Jul 2007, at 22:26, Dushan Mitrovich wrote:
Where do you see the `-`? The `-` in the lower right side is a symbol list. The column is just next to the `Line: xx` on the lower left. If you open a new document, you should see "Line: 1 Column: 1" (assuming you open a new document wihtout any templates.
What I see is this: "Line: 1 Column: _", followed by a pale vertical bar, followed by a pale colored disk with the white letter "L".
And this is even when you place the caret in the upper left corner, i.e. at column one?
Yes, even then.
<snip>
I¹ll update the manual. This command is gone. But there is a ³Create HTML From Document² which you can run, Show Web Preview (Window menu) and then print from there.
If you do this a lot, you can go to the bundle editor and change the output for the command to Show as HTML and give it a key equivalent. Then printing (colored) is just two keys instead of one.
Okay, I'll try that.
BTW, I'd like to thank you and compliment you for the clarity of your instructions (to someone else, earlier) on how to get the 'End' and 'Home' keys to work as in the non-OSX world. Since I much prefer the keyboard to the mouse, these instructions were a treat. I notice, tho, that there are still some apps that disregard that, such as in Firefox and Thunderbird. I suppose their structure is too different to notice the key mapping.
- Dushan
For new threads USE THIS: textmate@lists.macromates.com (threading gets destroyed and the universe will collapse if you don't) http://lists.macromates.com/mailman/listinfo/textmate
Dushan Mitrovich wrote:
BTW, I'd like to thank you and compliment you for the clarity of your instructions (to someone else, earlier) on how to get the 'End' and 'Home' keys to work as in the non-OSX world. Since I much prefer the keyboard to the mouse, these instructions were a treat. I notice, tho, that there are still some apps that disregard that, such as in Firefox and Thunderbird. I suppose their structure is too different to notice the key mapping.
They are not Cocoa applications. Camino should follow your preferred bindings, however, if you insist on a Gecko browser (and it also looks and behaves a lot better than Firefox on a Mac ;) ).