---- Ken Schneider - openSUSE <suse-list3@bout-tyme.net> wrote:
It's not. In fact, isn't kate the editor for kdevelop? My point, which I guess I didn't make very well, was that since there is no current fully wsywig html editor, I've found that manual editing, with snippets from the standard maintainers to reduce the dreary long repetitive strings, makes html building easy. Just flipping back and forth between Firefox and kdevelop is as easy as any current dedicated html builder that I found. And I like actually seeing what I'm doing.
jp
/snip/ I use Kate as just a very capable text editor, but looking at the "tools" menu, it looks like it can function nicely as a programming editor for several different
On 02/27/2013 10:11 PM, j.e.perry@cox.net wrote: programming environments, can work in Unix or DOS type systems, and can do some useful text manipulation. One thing I use it for: I am an editor of a small (~1000 circulation) newsletter, and sometimes I get submissions as standard emails. In order to get them into printable format, with Times-Roman fully justified text, i have to strip out the end-of-line/carriage returns from the email before I can paste it into a word processor. (I'm using a paid program, TextMaker, from SoftMaker, which is a bit more powerful than LO or OO.) Kate can do that nicely, by using the "join lines" feature on each paragraph, then pasting the whole works into SoftMaker, where it settles nicely into margin-delimited format, and can then be justified. I really don't see why it's not the "standard" text editor in Linux or Windows. (Yes, there's a Windows version.) --doug -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org