![]() ![]() “ADA: TextMate 1.5.2”, Daring Fireball Linked List, 8 August 2006. “Third Time’s The Charm”, Tao of Mac, 8 January 2006. ![]() “TextMate 1.5”, TextMate Blog, 6 January 2006. “A cool new text editor - TextMate - Mac OS XArchived at Archive.today”, Inspirational Technology, 6 October 2004. “TextMate: The Missing Editor for OS XArchived at the Wayback Machine”, Drunkenblog, 4 November 2004. “TextMate 1.0.1 Review: A Checkmate for TextMate?Archived at the Wayback Machine”,, 8 October 2004. “TextMate 1.0.1 emerges after nine betas”, TextMate Blog, 21 October 2005. “Profiles/Allan Odgaard” on the TextMate wiki, 20 November 2005. “TextMate 1.0 is finally here!”, TextMate Blog, 5 October 2004. TextMate 1.5 won the Apple Design Award for best developer tool in 2006. It is explicitly text only, and does not guarantee that arbitrary binary data in a file will be preserved through a load/save cycle, regardless of whether that data is edited. Despite its substantial support for macros, commands, and snippets, TextMate has no built-in support for code-hinting or guided code-completion, so text editors that support these features may prove to be a better choice when learning the syntax of a new language or coding in verbose languages.No built-in HTML validator - because TextMate uses the W3C validator for HTML validation, users must have an active network connection to validate HTML using the standard functionality.Allan Odgaard explained his thoughts on the subject in an email to the TextMate mailing list, advocating for 'platform-recommended' solutions. Because TextMate is not tightly coupled to a scripting language, as Emacs is to Emacs Lisp, it is impossible for users to have complete control over the program's configuration and behavior.TextMate does have a few limitations when compared to other editors in its class: ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |