[TxMt] Site Manager Window
Michael Gregoire
mgee at gwi.net
Wed Jan 17 21:40:53 UTC 2007
A plugin can't hurt. Though personally, I have no use for WYSIWYG
functionality what-so-ever.
The reason I use TextMate is because I don't require an app to hold
my hands. Anything that TextMate can't do I can do in apps that are
made specifically for the required functionality.
Peace
Mike
On Jan 17, 2007, at 4:20 PM, Todd Ditchendorf wrote:
> perhaps this is an opportunity for a plugin? Does anyone have a
> sense of whether a site management palette would be a highly
> desired addition to TextMate? Would an attempt to make textmate
> compete with apps like Dreamweaver make sense? We all know
> textmate's the better text editor... if you could install a plugin
> to add decent site management features...
>
> I wonder if this is a bit of a slippery slope... WYSIWYG HTML
> editing would almost certainly be desired by the web devs who would
> be looking for site management features. This could be done with a
> TM plugin... something akin to SandVox, perhaps using WebKit's
> contentEditable features. But experience from TeXMLMate tells me it
> would be a bit risky as you'd need to do quite a bit of peeking
> under the OakTextView (TextMate's custom TextView)'s skirt to sync
> the WYSIWYG editing changes back to the textmate main editor
> window. The plugin would likely be quite brittle in the face of TM
> updates.
>
> This is a reason I hope Allan will find time to add a more complete
> TM Plugin api... with more hooks that will be stable in future
> releases... I'm sure Allan realizes this is needed... considering
> there's been so few plugins to this point, he prolly figures he has
> more important priorities.
>
> If you would be interested in these features speak up... it would
> be a big job, but it might be a fun plugin project to tackle.
>
> Todd Ditchendorf
>
> Scandalous Software - Mac XML Developer Tools
> http://scan.dalo.us
>
>
>
> On Jan 17, 2007, at 1:11 PM, Greg Smith wrote:
>
>> Thanks for the feedback. I'm not concerned with it's visual
>> preview of HTML files. skEdit is also a text editor (also has a
>> preview function for HTML files, for what it's worth), but
>> includes a very nice and very simple site manager window. That's
>> what I was getting at.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Greg
>>
>>
>> On Jan 17, 2007, at 1:01 PM, Kai Janson (kaijanson@) wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Greg,
>>>
>>> TextMate is a text editor as the name implies but ... it has a
>>> rudimentary preview function for HTML files ... not too shabby...
>>>
>>> --Kai
>>>
>>> On Jan 17, 2007, at 2:50 PM, Greg Smith wrote:
>>>
>>>> Does TextMate have a Site Manager window, like Dreamweaver or
>>>> skEdit for one-point access to everything?
>>>>
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> Greg
>>>>
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>>
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>
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