Today I was playing with Coda 2 as this is for the first time I'm using it after buying the IDE yesterday night. I've installed emmet on coda to speed up my workflow. At the same time I was trying to save some snippets in the Coda clips. Unfortunately the problem started here! When I'm pressing the TAB key to bring my clips snippets to the editor, emmet comes up with it's html contents. Like when I was trying to trigger hhtm (which is my doctype declaration in Coda 2), it comes up with <hhtm></hhtm>. There is only one solution to this which is to uncheck the "Expand abbreviation with TAB key" in emmet, but I want to use both! Is there any way to use both emmet and Coda clips together at the same time using the TAB key?
No, it’s not possible, Coda does not provide such API.
As a workaround you can keep all your snippets (“clips” in Coda terms) in Emmet: http://docs.emmet.io/customization/snippets/
I realise this is a seriously old question, but in case someone else looks for the answer: Keep "Expand abbreviation with TAB key" on in emmet and you can use 'ALT + TAB' to expand your coda snippets - you just need to remember which are which!
Related
If there's only one tab on an editor in VS Code, the default behavior is to close the editor right then and there.
Personally, and I think many others agree with me, this behavior is very annoying since the programmer would rather preserve the layout he or she created for the project's workspace.
How do I change this behavior?
I've found discussions on this topic, but all of the solutions do not seem to be the ideal one of simply leaving the editor open but empty. Most of them simply delete the related shortcuts, which seems to me like cutting your arm off just because you broke it.
Anyway, here are some useful links:
Superuser StackExchange: How to prevent VScode from closing editor when pressing ctrl+w with no tabs open?
Issue #54492: Remove CtrlCmd+W keybinding to close window when no editors are opened
The behavior of the shortcut ctrl+w is as-designed closing the application
Actually, VSCode 1.57 (May 2021) will change that:
Removed Cmd+W / Ctrl+W as keybinding to close window when no editor is opened
We have gotten feedback that users are frustrated when the window suddenly closes after having closed the last editor via rapid Cmd+W / Ctrl+W usages.
A quick poll in the team also revealed that many had the keybinding for closing a window unassigned, so we went ahead and removed Cmd+W / Ctrl+W as keybinding to close window when no editor is opened.
You can easily bring the keybinding back by configuring it as follows:
{
"key": "cmd+w", // use "ctrl+w" on windows
"command": "workbench.action.closeWindow",
"when": "!editorIsOpen && !multipleEditorGroups"
}
Note: on all platforms there is a dedicated assigned keybinding to close the window:
macOS: Cmd+Shift+W
Linux: Alt+F4
Windows: Alt+F4
If what you are looking for is to preserve empty groups as well as empty editor windows, there is an option in the preferences that gets you almost all of the way:
"workbench.editor.closeEmptyGroups": false
This has the effect that an editor group will stay open even if the last tab within it is closed.
but all of the solutions do not seem to be the ideal one of simply leaving the editor open but empty
Reddit has an answer providing you the ideal solution of leaving the editor open, but empty: close all tabs but leave editors open.
In brief, they suggest to use in rapid succession the "close all editors" and the "three column editor layout".
They suggest to create a macro like:
"macros": {
"closeAllTabs": [
"workbench.action.closeAllEditors",
"workbench.action.editorLayoutThreeColumns"
]
}
then bind it to a key combination. macrosRe is advised.
The behavior of the shortcut ctrl+w is as-designed closing the application, see #49023. It is advisable to remove the shortcut and cut the arm, since it is design to work like that. However, for version 1.43.1 a new comment was posted this year on a thread you linked. You might want to have a look at it as well.
When I am typing in NetBeans 8.2, whether it is a HTML paragraph or something like an input field, this annoying auto-suggest feature keeps on popping up. It is really annoying when I try to press enter to start a new line as it will insert a load of code when I press enter, since 'Button' is automatically highlighted.
I've included a screenshot of the problem below...
How can I disable this autocorrect feature. I don't want to disable autoorrect for PHP or when actually setting up a HTML tag (so I want to use it in a situation like this... <input type="autocorrect displays here" />, but not when typing anything else).
Sorry if I haven't explained myself very well, I can't really think of a good way to describe my problem. Please, leave a commend if you need to know more.
Thanks :)
PS: I can't find any other answers on the internet because I don't know what this is called, since I want this specific auto-suggest to disappear, so please direct me to another answer and I'll delete this question if the answer is appropriate.
PPS: I think the palette may have something to do with it but I can't be sure.
I finally found the solution for this annoying problem:
Simply go to Tools/Palette/Code Clips and remove everything from Palette (all folders and items).
Now the problem is gone!
If you go into NetBeans > Tools > Options > Editor > Code Completion, you can check or uncheck "Auto Popup Completion Window" for whatever Languages you want.
If you move over to the Code Templates tab, you can also customize the specific autocomplete rules for each Language. That way, you can leave certain ones in that you find helpful and remove ones that you find bothersome.
Today I finally had enought of these * autocompletes in my * code.
Found my way thru Google to this question and found no comfort from the answers.
But this is how I did it:
Open Code Clips -manager (Tools > Palette > Code Clips)
Select all HTML-related and click "Remove"
Profit
Apache Netbeans 12.1.
Palette > Code Clips > Remove -- does not work.
NetBeans > Tools > Options > Editor > Code Completion > Disable "Auto popup completion window" -- does work.
In NetBeans 12, disabling the Auto Popup Completion Window option for HTML does not solve the problem when editing PHP files, the popup shows up whenever Tab is pressed in HTML portions of code.
The solution is to keep the Auto Popup Completion Window active for All Languages, then switch to the Code Templates tab, select Language: HTML, remove all templates from the list, and voilá. No more HTML popup suggestions, anywhere, ever. Only the good old PHP suggestions will remain active.
I realize this is not a programming question, but it's driving me nuts and there is no other place to ask this kind of question.
In Android Studio (1.0.2) if I press the Tab key, it jumps exactly 1 indentation level. Even if I am in the middle of some heavily nested code, and I have to press Tab a bazilion times to arrive at the maximum indentation level, where it should have put the cursor in the first place.
Both Eclipse and Xcode jump to the max indent level if I press Tab, and that works way better for me.
How can we set the Tab key to jump to the maximum indent every time?
I'm running the same version (Mac), and was looking for the same thing.
Go to Android Studio Settings ---> Keymap
Find the entry for "Emacs tab" and assign a key.
This option does not have a key assigned by default, so you need to create one yourself.
If you really like the way Emacs works for tabs (I do), you can assign the tab key to this, and will be the default.
Working fine here now.
Does the keyboard shortcut for moving from editor to console back and forth in Sublime Text 2 exist? If so what is it?
For a Python Code block you can use Ctrl+` (The single quote on the tilde key). There are some other useful shortcuts here:
Useful Shortcuts
Not sure if this helps with other scenarios.
Is there some way to get "surround with" in the Aptana perspective in Eclipse like you have in the Java perspective. I would love to be able to surround text with html tags like eg: <div></div> with a keyboard shortcut. Is there some way of doing that with the snippets rubles?
Thanks,
You can do this with AutoHotKey, which has the added benefit of being available across all apps. I have a script which launches a 'surround' menu when I select some text and press CTRL+SHIFT+C
To use it, install AutoHotKey, and create a new .txt file with the following code, and replace the extension with .ahk
http://pastebin.com/48ipiXsG
At the top of the file you'll find a number of groups of items, in the following format
<h1>~<h1>##</h1>
the ~ character divides the name of the function and the function content. The bit before ~ is what appears on your menu, and after the ~ is the code. ## represents where your selected text will go. So if you select the text 'AutoHotKey' and press CTRL+SHIFT+C, and then select <h1> from the menu, it'll replace the with <h1>AutoHotKey</h1>
There are several menus in the script, set up to launch based on what app you press CTRL+SHIFT+C in. For example, I get different shortcuts if I'm in Visual Studio than if I'm in SQL Server. You can modify these easily enough, but the generic menu should work fine for you. Feel free to chop and change but you have to leave GENERIC at the top of the script.
PS: I use this script everyday, and there is one small bug. The script saves whatever you have in the clipboard in a variable, and then writes it back to the clipboard when it's done. Sometimes, instead of surrounding text it replaces it with whatever you had in the clipboard. This is easily undone with CTRL-Z and usually works the second time you try it. I've never been able to figure out what causes this, maybe some autohotkey heads can help out?
PPS : This script is based on some other scripts from the AHK forums, including this one
http://www.autohotkey.com/docs/scripts/FavoriteFolders.htm
So you may find comments that don't make sense. I've seen a few references to the middle click, as the script above uses the middle mouse button instead of CTRL+SHIFT+C.