Praise is also due to mc-directors for selecting cooledit as the default editor.
I've set-up cooleditor's: Cmd X to transform:------- > But I've almost always been disappointed by the fact that in > dog+ spurious > in mid-line remove multi-spaces > xterm and/or konsole, I've been unable to find a key binding > shrtline2 > that will copy the full path name of the currently selected > shrtline-3 > file to the command line. to the cleaned up format of: > But I've almost always been disappointed by the fact that in > dog+ spurious in mid-line remove multi-spaces xterm and/or > konsole, I've been unable to find a key binding shrtline2 > that will copy the full path name of the currently selected > shrtline-3 file to the command line. by modifing the 'External formatter' script; which I can't re-find right now?! --------------- When I find the dir, I want to modify 'Format paragraph: M-p" to: <append the marked text to fixed file>. So now I see: /usr/lib/mc/cedit.menu which is clearly a <template menu for: perl, shell, C, your-own..languages>. I've long held that you shouldn't have to write the language 'per syntax', but should just be able to pick-off the constructs:'If, While, Case..Function..etc.' and just fill-in the arguments. Apparently cedit.menu goes in this direction by providing the syntax templates, which are then just filled in. Q. how do we access this facility ? Cooledit's syntax hi-lighting is great too. The beauty of working with a mc/cooledit system-type is that you can continually refine and tune for increased productivety, instead of being locked-in to some product/format. _______________________________________________ Mc mailing list http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/mc