I'm using Notepad++ for python development, and few days ago I found out about free Komodo Edit.
I need Pros and Cons for Python development between this two editors...
I'm currently using Visual Studio 2008 to edit .js files with, and it has decent support but I want more...
I like the VS syntax highlighting and auto-indentation features but additionally would like advanced features like: contextual info and help, collapsible JavaScript blocks, implicit symbol understanding for searching, refactoring and that kind of thing; also warnings and errors for the js code.
Suggestions?
I have made an XML Schema - all the code basically - and was wondering if there is a way that the code can generate something like this:
http://www.novell.com/documentation/extend52/Docs/help/Director/books/PGImages/novell_portlet_xml_schema.gif
If so how can I do it?
Hello.
I like to use the split window feature in Vim. However I cannot seem to drag drop new files into the different sections. Doing so will just open a new tab. I don't like using tabs as I still need to flick between them and not much different to using separate windows.
Is there anyway I can change this behaviour? It works fine on Windows gVim and Im using the same vimrc file.
Just curious what experienced Textmate users can't live without in the program. I just ran the trial and bought the program so I'm trying to get a sense of how others might setup their development environment for web development.
Also, based on the fact that I just bought the program, I am going to guess that TM2 will come out next week. Yes, that's right, next week. Unfortunately, because of my luck, it will not be a free upgrade...upgrades will cost more.
When editing an html file in vim, the indentation for css inside style tags is messy.
For instance, this is how it would indent this sample css code without any manual intervention to fix the indentation on my part:
div.class
{
color: white;
backgroung-color: black;
}
Why is this happening? how can I fix it?
Hello,
Gobby/Sobby is an open source client/server for collaborative edition of plain text file (source code).
My question is 4-fold :
Can you share any real-life usage of Gobby/Sobby for development among a group of physically separated developers ?
Is the project mature enough as a productivity tool ?
What are the working use cases ?
What versions should be used ? (It seems 'undo' feature is not yet officially packaged)
Thanks
Jerome
Seriously. On a 22" monitor, it only covers maybe a quarter of the screen. I need some ammo to axe down this rule.
Edit: I'm not saying that there shouldn't be a limit; I'm just saying, 80 characters is very small.
I've noticed that the StyledTextControl (Scintilla basically) in wxWidgets has a great feature that allows multi-selections of text, just like TextMate. However wxRuby doesn't seem to have the function calls to support that feature. I'm wonder if there is a way to enable it or if there might be a way I could rewrite that wrapper to include that function.
It seems strange that they would purposely omit that since they are seemingly pretty exhaustive on most functions calls. Any insight on this would be greatly appreciated. I'm trying to write an open source TextMate clone in Ruby and it's gonna be pretty hard without MultiSelect, I could probably hack something together but it'd be ugly. Thanks ahead of time.
how do people view encrypted pictures like on this wiki page? is there a special program to do it, or did someone decide to do some silly xor just make a point about ECB? im not a graphics person, so if there are programs to view encrypted pictures, what are they?
When I type the closing brace in an html page, this i what Visual Studio does. Notice the opening brace is now 1 indent before the foreach. They should be even as shown by the closing brace. Not a big thing but driving me nuts.
<% foreach (var item in Model.Messages)
{ %>
<% } %>
Hello,
Im working with quite big xml file (~20-40 MB) and I'm using notepad++.
Is there any better application to view and analyze such a big xml files ?
thanks for help
Hello, I'm making an application, in which I need to run a code that will tell system events to keystroke a certain phrase. Like in an AppleScript, I would do:
Tell Application "System Events" to keystroke "This is a test"
I don't know how to do this from Xcode, and I would really appreciate any help. Thank you!
What tools do you use that may be considered rare in that aspect that you have only seen a few people use it? It may be any tool that may be valuable for programmers.
I myself use UPX on occasions.
Hi,
Does anyone program with white text against black background? I have heard some rumors that it is better for your eyes. What's the case? Is it any better than the traditional black on white? What are the pros and cons?
Now that I am using vim for everything I type, rather then just for configuring servers, I wan't to sort out the following trivialities. I tried to formulate Google search queries but the results didn't address my questions :D.
Question one: How do I yank and replace multiple times ?
Once I have something in the yank history (if that is what its called) and then highlight and use the 'p' char in command mode the replaced text is put at the front of the yank history; therefore subsequent replace operations do not use the the text I intended. I imagine this to be a usefull feature under certain circumstances but I do not have a need for it in my workflow.
Question two: How do I type text without causing the line to ripple forward ?
I use hard-tab stops to allign my code in a certain way -- e.g.,
FunctionNameX ( lala * land );
FunctionNameProto ( );
When I figure out what needs to go into the second function, how do I insert it without move the text up ?
Question three Is there a way of having a uniform yank history across gvim instances on the same machine ? I have 1 monitors. Just wondering, atm I am using highlight + mouse middle click.
I know its a bit too early, but I've been trying out Go (Google's Programming Language) and its kindof annoying to write code in gedit.
So, my question: What do you use to experiment with Go?
Hello SO,
I want to be able to develop code using Visual Studio 2010. I just got VS2010 and I'm not able to get the languages I want on it. The main reason that I'm asking this is that I'm trying to migrate to ONE IDE that does it all for me. Thus far eclipse has been doing a good job, but I've been informed that VS2010 is better and I'm trying to get into the groove of that standard
So my question is two-fold.
I am not able to find a complete list of languages supported by VS2010. What are these languages?
How can I get VS2010 support for:
a. Python/IronPython
b. C/C++/C#/XNA
c. Java
My Googling has given me no promising/definitive results.
I'd really appreciate any help.
Typically in MSWord if a search result is off the page, the document window will move down to dispaly the result, already selected - but only just barely showing it. Is there a way to make the display move more, so that the result is (for example) centered instead? This is possible in other text editors such as SciTE using
caret.policy.yslop=1
caret.policy.lines=5