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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][tlug] Writing with Linux
- Date: Fri, 12 Mar 2004 09:28:26 +0900
- From: "Lyle (Hiroshi) Saxon" <ronfaxon@example.com>
- Subject: [tlug] Writing with Linux
- Organization: Images Through Glass
- User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.6) Gecko/20040113
Copy-pasting. I'm going to put some notes I've made about this in here just in case it might be of interest to anyone. This is a combination of observations and half-questions. No advice is needed exactly, but any additional information about effective copy-pasting would be greatly appreciated. I work with text from different files (sometimes in different formats) - generally tossing it into one file in order to most effectively edit it. Observations: Working with Klipper, changing the setting from: "Separate clipboard and selection" - to: "Synchronize contents of the clipboard and the selection" - seems to help in some cases where things were not copy-pasting from one application to another. In copy-pasting from one application to another, sometimes the content must be marked with Ctrl+C and then pasted with the third mouse button and not Ctrl+V. There are times when the same item keeps coming up when pasting - and not the most recently selected item. Going to Klipper and marking the desired item, or else selecting "Clear clipboard history" is a work-around that generally, but not always, works. Text editors I'm generally able to copy-paste into EditPad Pro, but not always. The times I'm not able to, I can copy-paste into SciTE, save that, and then open that file with EditPad Pro. Which brings me to a question that some might have: Why EditPad Pro? Functionally, I think most of what you can do with EditPad Pro is also doable with the other text editors, but SciTE forces me to work with a black screen (I often work at night and a black or dark background is less damaging to the eyes). For this reason alone I would want to use EditPad Pro (nedit opens in black, but I have to use the stark white console to get there), and there are other reasons as well. A few things that come to mind are: You can have several files open in the same window, with each file having its own tab at the top of the screen. When going from file to file, this is much easier and more time efficient than having to switch over to different windows. Irrespective of how text will print etc. (it is a text editor after all), you can set a default font size and style that you like to work with. Depending on your screen size and resolution settings, this can really help out. I'm using a 15-inch screen and the resolution is such that the default font size in most applications is a bit too small. After changing the settings, it's exactly as I like it in EditPad Pro every time I open the file. Live spell check which can be easily toggled on and off. I know - it's beginning to sound like a word processor and not like a text editor, but I assure you that it's a good balance of text editor and... well... any text editor is a word processor in a way, but for extended writing, a lot of text editors leave something to be desired. EditPad Pro is the only application I've used that allows me to work with several-hundred-page files (50,000 words and up) effortlessly and stably. No - I don't work for EditPad Pro or receive a royalty on sales! It's just that I have spent huge chunks of my life sitting in front of the computer working with text, and no other program from either the Evil Empire or the Free World has worked nearly as well for writing. Whether it's as good for programming, I don't know - I use it for writing.... And... a word about the group. Thank you to everyone who has helped me with one issue or another. I think I can understand the short fuses of those with higher levels of Linux skills - it's time consuming to help people; and to invest a chunk of your life helping (every minute spent is a minute you can never get back), and then not get anything in return is bound to cause a profound dissatisfaction. I will never be a computer programmer, but I'll try to help from a user's standpoint anyway. Lyle
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