Previously we would select the n’th file in the result list so one would have to then use arrow down to get to the first match of this file. Now we go directly to the first match in the file (unless the matches for the item is collapsed).
This means having a test file open (in TextMate) and using ⌘B, the test will always run, even if it has previously succeeded and none of the test’s dependencies have been updated.
This also works as a (quick) way to deselect all in the file browser (i.e. hit ⌃⌘R twice) which is useful when one wants to run commands on the entire project (e.g. Git → Show Uncommitted Changes).
I feel that the better API would be to make the selectedURLs property r/w (instead of read-only), but that is more involved since there is the case of setting a selection while the file browser is still loading items.
This is implemented by invoking “go back” if already showing an SCM URL. If there is no history (unlikely) then we instead “go up (parent)” which should take us to the root of the repository.
For example if you have all your projects under ~/Projects then you can do:
mkdir -p ~/Library/Application\ Support/TextMate/Favorites
cd ~/Library/Application\ Support/TextMate/Favorites
ln -s ~/Projects "[DIR] My Projects"
This will then have all the folders inside ~/Projects show when you choose Open Favorites… (⇧⌘O).
Long-term it might be useful to store actual property lists in the favorites folder, akin to smart folders (i.e. describe a query for what to show) and/or allow descending into the folders shown in the ⇧⌘O window.
Motivated by a lot of “where is the syntax highlight?” questions from users that build from source, we now always create the DefaultBundles.tbz (if it doesn’t exist).
Since ninja run each build job with its own stdin/out/err we can’t launch gdb itself in a build job, so we use osascript to launch gdb in a new window.
I used Terminal for this only because it is simpler to script than iTerm2.
The `disableIndentCorrections` setting now only disables the (aggressive) indent corrections that TextMate does while you type.
There is an additional `indentOnPaste` which you can set to:
1. `simple` — this is the indent behavior which was previously implied when setting `disableIndentCorrections`. It indents the paste to the position of the caret and works well for Python.
2. `disable` — the text is inserted as-is without indenting it.
3. «unset» — indent the paste based on the indent patterns of the current scope.
If session restore has been disabled then we will still ask, since the user would otherwise lose his changes. Ideally we’d launch the new instances with session restore temporarily enabled.
I moved it to a C header. An alternative would be to put some #ifdef’s around the Objective-C stuff in OakAppKit.h, but with the standalone header, it’s clear that this is the only thing we need from OakAppKit.
When two neighboring characters have different character class or one is an alpha numeric character (excl. underscore) and the other is not, we consider this a valid boundary for a tab trigger.
This closes issue #157.
I was initially under the impression that no data should be sent past EOF but from testing it is clear that this assumption is incorrect. It’s unimportant though as we do handle the case (though we didn’t initially, and that’s why I put in the fprintf, to verify the situation I guarded for actually was happening).
The fs::snapsot_t class creates a finger print of a folder. We used the source tree for testing, but if the source tree hosts the build directory, then the fingerprint will (likely) change, since we run simultaneous build jobs.
It now uses the Frameworks folder in the source tree, as it’s unlikely that someone would place their build directory in this location.
The key is consistent with the default key for bringing up the context menu in the text view — that key is however taken from the key bindings dictionary, so ideally we’d do the same in the file browser. Need to factor out the key bindings parsing code first though, and in theory the key bindings dictionary allow for multi-stroke bindings.
This implements issue #18.
This code was using (the no longer there in the 10.7 SDK) GetPortBounds() to be able to render into a CGContextRef.
It was also using the private _NSGetCarbonMenu to be able to install the menu handler (that augmented the rendering).
This is using NSAttributedString’s NSTextTableBlocks:
* Font is determined from current menu rather than hardcoded
* Fixed: Invalid font size on bundle-item popup
* Fixed: Both tab triggers and key equivalents can co exists on single menu item
* No relayout calculations are needed after menu update (this is done automatically by NSLayoutManager when using NSTextTables)
* Uses 10.5 compatible API