On Thu, Mar 01, 2007 at 09:43:11AM +1100, Jan Alonzo wrote: > Predictive is a minor-mode, text-completion package for Emacs. When enabled, > predictive mode exploits the redundancy inherent in languages in order to > complete words you are typing before you've finished typing them (somewhat > like the IntelliSense feature in some IDEs). It is highly customisable, and
Sorry, but I found the content of the above parens to be misleading. The main point of IntelliSense [1] is not about the actual completion which type the word after you started typing it, is more about where to find the possible completions and, in particular to find them via some kind of representation of a codebase (e.g. the list of all methods belonging to the class of the instance named to the left of a '.'). So, I ask you: either this is what "predictive" does for Emacs, maybe in some programmable way (and would be like Vim's omnicompletion feature) or it "just" complete in a single way using the word in the current buffer (as plain Vim's autocompletion) and then it would be better do describe it as "autocompletion". Cheers. [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IntelliSense -- Stefano Zacchiroli -*- Computer Science PhD student @ Uny Bologna, Italy [EMAIL PROTECTED],debian.org,bononia.it} -%- http://www.bononia.it/zack/ (15:56:48) Zack: e la demo dema ? /\ All one has to do is hit the (15:57:15) Bac: no, la demo scema \/ right keys at the right time
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