https://medium.com/programming-ideas-tutorial-and-experience/3a6db2743a1e
Sounds interesting, surely low-priority but still interesting :)
Elia
☁ @elia http://twitter.com/elia ✎ elia@schito.me
+1 - actually a simple but effective idea
On 29 Jan 2014, at 10:29, Elia Schito elia@schito.me wrote:
https://medium.com/programming-ideas-tutorial-and-experience/3a6db2743a1e
Sounds interesting, surely low-priority but still interesting :)
—Hans
all kinds of helpful possibilities like:
fade code that doesn’t involve the parameter name my cursor is in fade code outside the for-loop I am editing graphical overlay showing the fate of this parameter
On 29 Jan 2014, at 9:54 AM, Hans-Jörg Bibiko bibiko@eva.mpg.de wrote:
+1 - actually a simple but effective idea
On 29 Jan 2014, at 10:29, Elia Schito elia@schito.me wrote:
https://medium.com/programming-ideas-tutorial-and-experience/3a6db2743a1e
On 29 Jan 2014, at 10:29, Elia Schito elia@schito.me wrote:
https://medium.com/programming-ideas-tutorial-and-experience/3a6db2743a1e
Sounds interesting, surely low-priority but still interesting :)
I think the usability varies considerably with how much your code is made up by variables and how much by commands, functions etc. I am doing a lot of mathematical stuff in TM and usually have very many variables. I would imagine that under these circumstances it might be more confusing than helpful to vary the color for every variable. Yet again, maybe I would change my mind if I could see an implementation of this with my own code.
/Carsten