Let's change the subject line shall we? <!----------------//------ andy matthews web developer certified advanced coldfusion programmer ICGLink, Inc. [EMAIL PROTECTED] 615.370.1530 x737 --------------//--------->
-----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Erik Beeson Sent: Wednesday, December 20, 2006 11:59 AM To: jQuery Discussion. Subject: Re: [jQuery] New design on jquery.com It's "native" in that it doesn't require any additional plugin or config file. It parses all of the javascript it finds in your project. Here's a screenshot of a case insensitive completion: http://www.divshare.com/download/1081-4d6 And I don't even have a "web module" setup. It's smart about your paths to files if you set it up with a web module. I just have a plain old java module that I build with a custom ant build file. It has all the native javascript stuff you would want built-in too. I've been a long time user of IDEA and I can't imagine trying to do any serious work without it (though I do use gvim when I don't have IDEA handy). --Erik On 12/20/06, Jörn Zaefferer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Erik Beeson schrieb: > IntelliJ IDEA does a pretty good job at autocompletion. > > What I really need is that roast beef sandwich. Ok, I understand your desire for a roast beef sandwich. Is there native jQuery autocompletition support within InteillJ IDEA or do you need some kind of plugin or addon? This could be a really good reason for me to take a look at it at last... -- Jörn Zaefferer http://bassistance.de _______________________________________________ jQuery mailing list discuss@jquery.com http://jquery.com/discuss/
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