On 6/11/2015 12:09 PM, Richard Hipp wrote:
On 6/11/15, Jan Danielsson wrote:
On 11/06/15 14:37, Stephan Beal wrote:
[---]
As part of that, as much as i hate it, i am going to have to drop emacs.
That said - you'll never get me to change away from emacs key bindings :-)
For a number
On Thu, Jun 11, 2015 at 1:23 PM, Richard Hipp wrote:
> On 6/11/15, Stephan Beal wrote:
> >
> >> "A" - in other words swap the CapsLock and Ctrl keys - otherwise your
> >> pinky is a goner.
> >>
> >
> >
> > That's a great idea. i'll take a look at that (will help with bash, in
> any
> > case).
>
On Thu, Jun 11, 2015 at 03:09:46PM -0400, Richard Hipp wrote:
> On 6/11/15, Jan Danielsson wrote:
> Emacs key bindings are very hard on the left pinky. Proper wrist
> posture is essential to avoid repetitive stress injury. Also, use
> xmodmap to ensure that the Ctrl key is the key directly to th
On 6/11/15, Stephan Beal wrote:
>
>> "A" - in other words swap the CapsLock and Ctrl keys - otherwise your
>> pinky is a goner.
>>
>
>
> That's a great idea. i'll take a look at that (will help with bash, in any
> case).
>
Just an historical note for all you younglings:
In days of yore, the Ctrl
On Thu, Jun 11, 2015 at 9:09 PM, Richard Hipp wrote:
> On 6/11/15, Jan Danielsson wrote:
> >Interesting. I used to work with a colleague who said he couldn't
> > use emacs because it made his hand hurt. He said it in a serious tone,
> > but until now I figured it was just a form of dry hum
On 6/11/15, Jan Danielsson wrote:
> On 11/06/15 14:37, Stephan Beal wrote:
> [---]
>> As part of that, as much as i hate it, i am going to have to drop emacs.
>> My
>> symptoms have been 95% restricted to my 2 left-most fingers, namely those
>> which operate Shift and Ctrl (emacs being very ctrl-c
On 11/06/15 14:37, Stephan Beal wrote:
[---]
> As part of that, as much as i hate it, i am going to have to drop emacs. My
> symptoms have been 95% restricted to my 2 left-most fingers, namely those
> which operate Shift and Ctrl (emacs being very ctrl-centric and programming
> making heavy use of
Hi Stephen,
On 11 June 2015 at 05:37, Stephan Beal wrote:
> Hi, all,
>
> management summary/TL;DR: what (non-emacs) programming editor do you *nix
> users use for hacking on fossil?
Good to hear that you're improving!
Cross platform and open source:
http://komodoide.com/komodo-edit/
You could e
On Thu, Jun 11, 2015 at 6:37 AM, Stephan Beal wrote:
> Hi, all,
>
> management summary/TL;DR: what (non-emacs) programming editor do you *nix
> users use for hacking on fossil?
>
I've recently started using Sublime Text. It is not open source, but a good
editor is worth investing in (IMO, anyway
Try RamDebugger:
http://www2.compassis.com/c/ramdebugger/index
* It is developed in TCL-TK and is open source
* Is is version controlled by fossil
* It has a module to commit and update fossil projects
* It is suitable to develop TCL-TK, c++, XML and others
* It can use Makefile, gcc and gdb
On Thu, 11 Jun 2015 14:37:29 +0200
Stephan Beal wrote:
> management summary/TL;DR: what (non-emacs) programming editor do you
> *nix users use for hacking on fossil?
>
> Details...
>
> as of tomorrow it will be 6 months since my medical leave started for
> an inflamed elbow nerve (caused by too
Hi, all,
management summary/TL;DR: what (non-emacs) programming editor do you *nix
users use for hacking on fossil?
Details...
as of tomorrow it will be 6 months since my medical leave started for an
inflamed elbow nerve (caused by too much typing), and i will finally be
returning to work and FO
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