Is it possible to hide Sublime Text 3's console for ever?
I don't like the console's look, so I installed 'Buildview' to 'move the console into a view'.
Unfortunately the console is showing up as well as the Buildview when I build my SCSS.
Open Sublime Text -> Preferences -> Settings-User and add the following:
"show_panel_on_build": false
Save the file, and you shouldn't see the build pane anymore.
Related
After updating VSCODE to the latest version, the editor and the terminal show different indentation. Following figures present the format of the code in the editor and terminal, respectively.
Code in editor
Code in terminal
How can I keep the same indentation?
This problem is triggered by radian's auto-indent and can be solved by adding following code to the profile of radian.
options(radian.auto_indentation = FALSE)
why I can't use indentation and always automatically get the new line as the image below when I hit "enter", how could I change it to be indented?
Preview error indentation
It might be the editor you are using or extensions you've installed.
You can press "tab" to manually indent the code.
How to view a markdown file in Jupyter lab properly?
The readme file of a git project is written in markdown, as usual. How can one properly view it in Jupyter lab (rendered)? Currently I see the text version only.
A good solution is shown here in the
youtube video
Open the file, right click on the content, "Show markdown preview"
Right click on the open markdown text editor area and you should get a menu option "Show markdown preview". Select that and it will render the text into markdown in another window (side by side by default)
VS code recently added the ability to work with jupyter notebooks (.ipynb files), this is to say it renders them as notebooks and not the underlying text.
The problem I'm running into is I want to make some edits on the raw text rather than the "notebook" but I can't figure out how to show it as a text file the way any other editor would.
Is there a way to toggle between the views?
Disable automatically opening *.ipynb files in Notebook Editor
To make sure the Jupyter notebooks don't open in the Notebook Editor automatically, make sure to disable this settings. (Command Palette -> Settings)
OR
In the User or Workspace settings.json, add the following the root json - "jupyter.useNotebookEditor": false
To toggle between the Notebook Editor and Raw Text Mode Editing
There is an option/command called Reopen Editor with..., which will provide you options to open the *.ipynb file in text mode.
You trigger this by performing a Right Click on the Editor Tab (Editor Title Bar) or Command Palette -> Reopen Editor with...
PS: I have the Jupyter extension (v2020.12.414227025)
Open: File > Preferences > Settings
Search ipynb and deselect the following:
Other answers didn't work for me recently. I found no "use notebook editor" option under preferences, perhaps vs code has reorganized recently. Instead I found the following solution. Right click on an *.ipynb file tab to get the context menu, and click "Reopen Editor With..." as pictured below.
Then on the following popup click "configure default editor for .ipynb", and then click on the text editor as seen below:
And viola. The default settings have been changed.
I think the fastest way is to rename the file.
Just press F2 (or return for mac) while selecting the file in the vscode explorer, then rename from my-notebook.ipynb to my-notebook.json, because jupyter ipynb files are regular json files
Create .json file and paste the notebook json in there, save the file and then rename the extension to .ipynb and it will open in the jupyter editor
(Similar to aquirdturtle's answer)
What about
On the left side explorer
Right Click on file -> Open With -> Text Editor
Set the setting
"files.associations": {
"*.ipynb": "text"
}
Or try click on the Status Bar field that shows the Language Mode of the file in the lower right.
Use the command: Change Language Mode
I have a python tensorflow script that used 2 space indent. My Atom preferences have tab set to default: 2. When I hit enter after a : Atom does a 4 space auto-indent, inconsistent with the rest of the file and with the preferences.
In fact, a fresh install comes with the default set like this:
However, if I open a new file and hit the TAB button it tabs 4 spaces. This is bizarre!
I have just started using Atom, so maybe overlooking something obvious, but this is a frustrating problem.
IT turns out there are language-specific preferences that override the general editor preferences. These are accessed via Edit > Preferences > Packages > language-python > Settings which is where the tab length was set to 4.