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TextMate parking lot
Merlin Mann | Oct 6 2004
I can tell I’ll be spending a lot of the next few days exploring TextMate. In the interest of efficiency, I’ll park all my preliminary notes and “gee whiz” stuff in this post. I may do a fuller review/intro later, but I want to share what I’m learning since there’s so much interest in this app. [A plea: Let’s please keep the Hatfield and McCoy stuff over in the Google Group. I know, I know. “Vim is better” and “emacs is better” and “cuneiform scales better” and “BBEdit saved my baby from a man with a big knife,” but please don’t carp here. If you (don’t care about|hate|want to destroy all traces of) TextMate, just move to another post or start your own thread on your site, cool? Cool.] On with the motley! update: added links to other folks’ interesting TextMate posts. Cool stuffPipe web previews through a script of your choiceAs with many other text editors you can preview how text will look as a web page from within the app. TextMate allows you to optionally choose a script on your Mac through which the content is piped before visual preview. I’m thrilled that the default is Markdown—I maintain all my text files in Markdown and now I don’t have to do a lot of keyboard gymnastics to see what it will like when it’s parsed to HTML Create powerful snippets with tab-able variablesTextMate allows you to create “snippets,” which are abbreviated strings of text that can be triggered to “explode” into much longer strings of text with a simple I like how you can define variables in the exploded string and then hit When I want to create a link to a book on Amazon, I type
What you can’t see is that there are are three variables in that string, as expressed in the source for the snippet:
Those dollar signs and numbers are telling TextMate that these are the three spots where I’ll want to add or edit text each time this snippet gets exploded. The smart part is that TextMate automatically places the cursor at the point of the first variable (“$1”) so I can just start typing (or paste in) the ASIN for the book. Then, I hit I will use the crap out of snippets. Coming soon
Questions, Requests & Gripes
TextMate Elsewhere
38 Comments
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Hope this won't be considered...Submitted by Derek (not verified) on October 7, 2004 - 7:40am.
Hope this won't be considered off-topic (apologies if so), but since I sadly spend my days on Windows and only my nights on my beloved Lapzilla TiBook, I tend to stick with a cross-platform editor. For those in a similar boat, my preference is jEdit (http://www.jedit.org) - it's java-based, nicely configurable, and remarkably fast under JDK 1.4/1.5. It's pretty well-designed, and a little less unix-y than Emacs or vim (although both have warm places in my heart). The availablility of a multitude of plugins and macro languages (primarily beanshell, but plugins allow Python and Perl, among others) makes it incredibly powerful. (This isn't intended to be a this-that-or-the-other is better comment - I'm famously editor agnostic. Just a note for those who need a cross-platform editor, and like to use the same one everywhere.) TextMate looks lovely however...I'm probably going to have to try it out at home and see how it goes. If only I could work on my Mac full time. Thanks for the magnificent site, Merlin. » POSTED IN:
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