Current line blame in Atom editor [closed] - atom-editor

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There's a feature in VS Code's GitLense extension that I'm trying to find the equivalent for with Atom. It's the current line blame feature.
I have installed the Atom blame package which works, but is slow to load for large files with a large number of commits on them.
Is there anything in Atom or any package that will show blame for just the current line?

Eh, just didn't search hard enough. I just found this package which is fairly close. While it's not inline (displays via tooltip) it is fast, and has a link to the commit on the web as a bonus.

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Any thing about How to Design Components mentioned in How to Design Programs? [closed]

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I've just started reading How to Design Programs (2nd edition) on htdp.org
There are several notes in this book mentioned next volume called How to Design Components (e.g. the 3rd note in part one), however, I just can't google anything about the 2nd volume book.
I'm wondering why it is so hard to find any information about the latter volume. Has it finished? If it has not finished yet, how can I get information about the book?
The first author provides more information on his website:
We have decided to provide the draft of "How to Design Classes" (pdf)
on an "as is" basis for now. You are free to download and print it.

What is the best dictionary for texmaker? [closed]

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I using texmaker for writing I noticed that the dictionary is missing a lot of scientific words that MS word would never miss. Is there a better dictionary similar to what in MS Word.
Most often, the dictionary (en_US.dic and en_US.aff) will be located in >/ur/share/hunspell/
In Texmaker, In
Options/Configure Texmaker/Editor/Spelling Dictionary
load the 'en_US.dic' file.
If it is not there, do as following:
Try this link to get the latest updated dictionary http://extensions.openoffice.org/en/project/english-dictionaries-apache-openoffice
Download the .oxt file. Extract the files and then Open texmaker and in
Options/Configure Texmaker/Editor/Spelling Dictionary
load the 'en_US.dic' file.
And, if you need, look here as well : http://www.swisswuff.ch/wordpress/?p=166

R: Screenshot of you Desktop [closed]

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Is there a function or package to take a screenshot of your desktop?
I understand there are packages like webshot, RSelenium, and SeleniumPipes to take screenshots of the browser, but I'd like a way in R to interact with my OS's native screen capture utility (or ImageMagick's Import function) to take a screen capture of my desktop at command and save it locally.
Given comments, there may be a way to do this with a system call, but cannot seem to find any examples of this anywhere.

What are some high quality Standard ML code/projects to learn from? [closed]

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I'm trying to learn to write elegant Standard ML code by reading others' code or projects. Does anyone know of some good code/projects?
I found the MLton compiler to be a great source for learning the module system.
The Twelf theorem prover also has a lot of high quality examples.
The standardml github account has a number of projects of varying quality. Somehow my sml-ext library ended up there. I'm not sure how.

Good freeware clone of the VMS editor EDT for unix or the pc? [closed]

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I would like to have the same editor available on all of the platforms I frequent.
Emacs and Vi are not desired solutions.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/edt-text-editor/
There is nu/TPU which is more like EVE/TPU, and also JED, I've never found anything better than either of these.
I used to be the world's biggest fan of VMS and EVE/EDT/TPU - you're probably going to -1 me for saying this but why not get edt mode for emacs. There is a lot to be said for emacs in terms of speed and facilities and it is worth taking the time to learn enough to turn it into your editor of choice, which I think is why us folks who like emacs like it - because we can customise it to do what we want...
Currently I'm using Xemacs - customised to my keystrokes some of which came from EDT.

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