Atom.io find in project not working - atom-editor

I am trying to use the "find in project" feature of Atom editor.
I am coming from sublime and assumed that opening a folder is the equivalent of opening a project. Is this assumption correct?
If so, then I have a project open. I then search from a string using "Find in project". I am certain the string exists, and the file type is not ignored, yet it still returns no result.

I ran into this issue, and it only affected one project - a project in a git repo.
I checked the settings of the search field.. they were fine.
My issue was, as #fab313 mentioned above, as the setting in Core > Exclude VCS ignored paths.
Once I unchecked that box (Atom menu, Preferences, Core).. all project searches worked fine!

I had this same problem and I found that I accidentally clicked some of the settings boxes in the bottom right.
You just want to make sure you know which boxes are checked.
If I check one of those boxes (making them blue) then my CTRL/Command + F will only find a single result.
The settings will look like this and cause the problems for me:

Related

ASP.NET - copy existing project into solution - but cannot "Start Debugging" on any .ASPX?

In VS2015 I had an existing solution with one project ("projA").
Then, from another solution, I copied the files which make up four other projects to sit in the same directory as "projA".
I then opened the solution which has "projA" in it and used the "Add Existing Project" facility to add the four other projects.
The solution builds and everything looks happy.
However if, using Solution Explorer, I
go into one of the newly added projects (say 'projB')
select Foo.aspx from within 'projB' and
select 'Start Debugging'
then what I get served to the browser is not Foo.aspx from 'projB' but the 'Index.cshtml' from 'projA'.
I'm guessing (and 'guessing' is the word) this is related to the fact that 'projA' is marked as the startup project and 'projB' isn't ? So I read here https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/a1awth7y.aspx that I can have multiple startup projects but I'm not really clear on whether there's some negative aspect to that ? Would it make 'projB' visible in a way it currently isn't ?
Or maybe I've got all that wrong and there's some other reason for this ?
I think you can set the behavior you want from the solution property page. So go to the solution property page then common properties then Startup project and select Current selection so that when you select a document from a project it will be the startup project.

atom started as root but can't access some folders in project

I am using the Atom text editor and I have this problem that even when I start it as root:
sudo atom
there are still files in the project I can't access.
To be more accurate, the problem is that I am trying to look for some strings in the project with the Ctrl+Shift+f combination and I get no results even when the string I am looking for is copied from one of the files in the project.
I will add that all these folders I don't have access to during my search, are colored in a different color (Dark grey in my case but that's obviously per theme).
Any help please?
Have you tried changing the setting for Settings > Core Settings > Exclude VCS Ignored Paths? This is checked by default, and the fuzzy finder will not show files that are ignored. From your description, it sounds like these files are ignored (and thus shown in a different colour).
More info here: https://discuss.atom.io/t/project-search-does-not-index-files-in-gitignore/2804
Here's a screenshot showing the box to uncheck:

The Behavior "EventToCommand" of Blend4

I have already installed Blend4.Yesterday i installed the mvvmlight.But I haven't found my Blend4 have the behavior "EventToCommand".It's very important for my project.So how to solve it?
Directions for adding EventToCommand to Blend can be found here. Just scroll down the page until you see "Features, Usage: In Expression Blend".
If you've already installed the MVVM-Light Toolkit, as you say, then simply right-click on your "References" folder in Blend and click "Add Reference". Browse for your GalaSoft.MvvmLight.dll file and press OK. Repeat this process for the following dll's as well:
GalaSoft.MvvmLight.Extras.dll
System.Windows.Interactivity.dll (contains the base code for all behaviors, so you may already have a reference for this)

How to bookmark code in XCode 4?

I couldn't find a way to put a bookmark inside the code in XCode 4. I know about the #pragma mark thing but it's not what I'm looking for. What I need is something that I can put and remove with a mouse click and navigate amongst with next and previous, like in VS.
Is there anything that I'm missing?
Bookmarks seem to have gone the way of the dinosaur in Xcode 4. This wouldn't have been so bad had the jump-to-bookmark popup above the editor in previous versions not also disappeared. The best replacement currently seems to be to use breakpoints (disabled individually, of course) and navigate with the Breakpoint Navigator.
Shortcut to breakpoints is Cmd + 8. Once there use arrow keys
File a bug report at http://bugreporter.apple.com if you feel something like this should be brought back.
Write below comment in your source file that you want bookmarked.
//<##>
And you can navigate to next / previous with: '^/' or '^?'
<##> means "placeholder of code snippet"
^/ means "jump to next placeholder"
^? means "jump to previous placeholder"
thanks
Another option, if anyone is still interested. The following directives will both produce a compiler warning that you can use as a bookmark:
#pragma message "<# message #>"
or
#warning <# message #>
If you want to place bookmarks using your mouse: create a code snippet with one of the 2 directives above. Drag & drop it to the line in your source file that you want bookmarked.
Navigate to next/previous with: Cmd-' and Cmd-Shift-'
In Xcode 4.4, if you leave a comment with this format:
// TODO: Your text here
it will be added as a listing in the jump bar alongside the list of methods in your current file, and then you can jump straight to that comment from that menu.
The simplest technique is to use a comment prepended by // TODO and then search, which allows you to jump through the issues from the navigator. Pretty hard to beat that technique.
I personally don't like using break points for bookmarks because it is not easy to enter notes. I use breakpoints as breakpoints, and prefer not to mix them up with bookmarks.
Anyhow, if you want to get a bit fancier you could get xcode to generate warnings // TODO: some message or // FIXME: some message that can be navigated in the issue navigator. I took the instructions below from this site:
Instructions
Head over to your project's item in the Project Navigator (usually at the very top)
Find your target in the list of targets on the left, select it
Head over to the "Build Phases" tab.
Click the "Add Build Phase" in the bottom right of this screen.
In the editor that appears insert the bash script shown below.
Now just build and you'll see all your //TODO: and //FIXME: comments have become warnings. I love this technique, it might not be right for everyone, but hope it helps someone.
Bash Script For "Run Script" Build Phase
KEYWORDS="TODO:|FIXME:|\?\?\?:|!!!:"
find "${SRCROOT}" ( -name ".h" -or -name ".m" ) -print0 | xargs -0 egrep --with-filename --line-number --only-matching "($KEYWORDS).*\$" | perl -p -e "s/($KEYWORDS)/ warning: \$1/"
You'll also be able to click on each of the warnings in the issue navigator to go right to the file and point in your code where you left the original //TODO: or //FIXME:
Extra pro tip: Make sure you're using phrases to describe your //TODO: comments like //TODO: Handle this error gracefully, and things like that. The phrases will show up in the issues list beside each warning.
Credit for the little tidbit should go to "Tim" on the Cocos2D forums, (found after Googling for a bit), I believe his solution originally was intended for Xcode 3 and didn't work if you had spaces in your path name, my script here doesn't have those restrictions, still he should get full credit here's his original post.
Like npellow's answer to this question of mine, appCode by JetBrains has also made this possible. So, this may be another reason to use appCode instead of Xcode4, except that it won't be free later in time.
My method:
type in grammar error code in the previous line.....
After changing something in other place, I can go back to the previous place because the grammer error line will show a red line in the right side scroll bar. It indicate the place.
It is not elegant but unless there is a bookmark feature, this is the way i am using at the moment
You can install an Xcode plugin called "XBookmark".
This plugin provide features below :
Toggle Bookmark
Show Bookmarks
Next Bookmark
Previous Bookmark
How to install XBookmark:
Install Alcatraz.
Search XBookmark from Window->Package Manager and click Install.
Restart Xcode.
Now, you can see menus about bookmarks in the Edit Menu.
PS : This plugin is open source.

Aptana Studio 3 - code coloring like in Dreamweaver

I'm trying to use Aptana Studio 3 instead of phpEd. But I'd like to have the code coloring like in Dreamweaver. I made these changes in phpEd, but I can't find where to change it in Aptana.
Also, I installed the jquery bundle, but I can't to get it working...
Thanks for your help.
Preferences:Aptana:Themes. Figuring out what keyword corresponds to what display object can be a bit tricky, but it is all there.
There's actually a ticket already filed to add a theme that matches Dreamweaver: https://aptana.lighthouseapp.com/projects/35272/tickets/1508-create-dreamweaver-color-theme
I'm looking at it now, but I'm running into some internal bugs (namely https://aptana.lighthouseapp.com/projects/35272-studio/tickets/2357-scope-selectors-with-portion-prefix-match-arent-matching-properly) that I need to fix before I can finish. In any case it should be in Studio 3.0.2 and hopefully I'll fix it today and it'll be in tomorrow's nightly (here's how to get nightly builds: http://wiki.appcelerator.org/display/tis/Changing+the+Update+Type).
As for editing themes yourself, you can see the current scope at the cursor by doing Commands > Bundle Development > Show Scope. Then use scope selectors that match that sort of scope (we adopt Textmate's scoping/theming rules: http://manual.macromates.com/en/scope_selectors)
Could you finally get your theme?
If you want to create your own theme then first go to: Window->Preferences->Aptana Studio->Themes
To create a new theme just click on the "+" sign next to the themes
list.
To add elements to your new theme right click the text in your
editor and click Commands->Bundle Development->Show scope.
Copy the last section you see to the right of the hint window that
appears.
In the themes elements list click the "+" located at the bottom of
the dialog box (next to "Scope selector")
Give a friendly name to your new element.
Assign foreground/background colors to your new element.
Paste the element's scope in the "Scope selector" input box (make
sure your new element is selected, if not, click on it).
I created a theme for PHP, CSS, HTML, JS and XML editors, similar to the old aptana 2 colors. If you want to get it you can write me to jgarcias.cr at gmail dot com.
Cheers.

Resources