Yeah I just noticed that, it’s a really nice program. I think the code-snippets are great and the search and replace for specific lines is great too. Saves me a ton of time if specific things need changing like copyright dates.
I’d take CSSEdit (http://www.macrabbit.com) over Coda’s CSS Editor. It feels like it’s super simplified yet I don’t get to see what I’m working with unless I split windows and then have to scroll a ton.
They just added it into their font set. You can too if you have the
font on your machine by either clicking New… in the Font list or
going to Edit>Font Sets and clicking New. Remember to add some similar
fonts that will be available on other machines platforms if they don’t
have the first font in the list. The folk at Panic have used
Helvetica, then Arial, then sans-serif.
The list of fonts should look like this:
“HelveticaNeue-Light”,Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif
This will only work on Safari though as far as I can tell (the
replacements are used instead on other browsers).
Regards,
Joe
On 27 Aug 2008, at 09:27, WebWorker wrote:
How does the coda site get font HelveticaNeue-Light to display as a
HTML font?
I agree that CSSEdit is a more well-rounded editor (I own and use it) but I’ve become so enamored of Coda’s UI that I’m usually willing to accept the somewhat simpler - but still very useful - CSS editor. We have it bad, don’t we? Having 2 such nice editor options to choose from. These are good times.
; )
Todd
On Aug 27, 2008, at 3:12 AM, Dan J wrote:
I’d take CSSEdit (http://www.macrabbit.com) over Coda’s CSS Editor. It feels like it’s super simplified yet I don’t get to see what I’m working with unless I split windows and then have to scroll a ton.