Slimbatterymonitor Screenshots
Because I'm not a communist? I don't even use Emacs as my REPL, even though it does a decent job for Python and Ruby. I want my up-arrow to work the way it does everywhere else, and I want to be able to cycle the interpreter process in less than a second.
ASUS ZenScreen Go MB16AP is the world’s thinnest and lightest Full HD (1920 x 1080) portable USB monitor with a built-in battery. Need help with code blocks for mac. Weighing just 900g and only 8mm thin, the 15.6-inch monitor is ideal for professionals on the go. The t:slim X2 Insulin Pump with Basal-IQ Technology (the System) consists of the t:slim X2 Insulin Pump, which contains Basal-IQ Technology, and a compatible CGM. CGM sold separately. The t:slim X2 Insulin Pump is intended for the subcutaneous delivery of insulin, at set and variable rates, for the management of diabetes mellitus in persons requiring insulin.
My.irbrc will load a per-directory.irbrc for me, so while I'm testing, CTR-D up-arrow enter will reset my test case for me. Making Emacs does this was just too much of a pain. As for hexl-mode --- have you ever used Hex Fiend? For that matter, have you ever used hexl-mode? I don't use hex editors only occasionally. I would pay money for a great hex editor.
I would pay twice as much money never to have to use hexl-mode. Luckily, I don't have to do either; Hex Fiend is free. It is awesome.
Slim Battery Monitor Screenshots In Windows
You can pull a 15 meg firmware image into it, and it won't even blink; you can search for a symbol table signature across that whole binary in sub-user time. I'm not one of those people who wants their Emacs to do everything it can possibly do. I read my mail in Mail.app, and my news in NetNewsWire. What do you get out of running your terminals in Emacs? I'm genuinely curious. I'm too lazy to change the defaults on the fonts. Blame the Notepad++ guys.
And I rarely notice the comment issue that you pointed out. As sadly most of the code I work on is sorely lacking in comments.
The line wrapping isn't an issue because I usually make it much wider, and if when its wider there's still line wrapping, the person who wrote such code should probably be forced to endure great pain. Most programs I work on have a 'please don't make 250-character-lines' policy, for good reason. Split-screen editing (of the same file even; most editors don't let me split-screen edit the same file in two different windows), automatic syntax highlighting, bracket-matching (the standard stuff), tabbed editing, and the various built-in tools.
I do sometimes use vim, but I find that a simple tabbed GUI text editor gives me the most productivity. I've never liked IDEs, especially since I would rather just type 'make' than try to use an internal build system. Add to this the fact that both my company and all my personal projects are based on the GNU toolset in some form or another. (4800x1200, large-ish jpg file) FreeBSD + WindowMaker + Synergy Server on the left (IBM P3 from 2002 w/ 4g RAM and SCSI) Windows XP on center and right screens (ThinkPad T60p), Synergy Client I tend toward maximized windows in window managers that make it easy to do so (such as XP) but things get pretty messy when I can't.