[Pro] Cleaning up code?

Does anyone know if Coda 2 can cleanup custom code? In other words, can it properly format the code with tabs and such?


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It doesn’t appear to. One of my favorite features of TextMate is its amazing cleanup of typed code. I also use it to figure out where I’ve forgotten a brace or something, because if the code doesn’t all line up at the same column when it’s done cleaning up, there’s a mistake somewhere.

Walter

On Jun 14, 2012, at 4:04 PM, RavenManiac wrote:

Does anyone know if Coda 2 can cleanup custom code? In other words, can it properly format the code with tabs and such?


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So TextMate is your preferred editor for coding?


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Does anyone know if Coda 2 can cleanup custom code?

I don’t know. There might be a plugin. Textmate I’m sure is better at this anyway.

Todd


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Yes, has been for years. It is definitely a coder’s editor: if you know Ruby, you can write extensions for it that can do anything.

I keep trying (and often buying) all the other coding editors, but nothing else has done it for me so far.

I buy Coda each time it comes out, mostly to support Panic and in the hope that they have finally built a TextMate “killer”.

I bought Espresso twice (v1 and v2), and have used it maybe three times. I wish CSSEdit was updated instead of Espresso, because as nice as the CSS3 features are in Espresso 2, the interface is nowhere near as usable as CSSEdit 1. And who takes away the cleanup feature and calls that a good thing?

I’ve owned BBEdit since 1996, when I used to use it to clean up copy submitted to me in Word before entering it into QuarkXPress. Ah, nostalgia! I keep buying updates and new versions of that, too. And there’s still some things I prefer to do in BBEdit.

Richard Logan used to say “horses for courses”, so I guess I own a stable or something.

Walter

On Jun 14, 2012, at 4:21 PM, RavenManiac wrote:

So TextMate is your preferred editor for coding?


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Sounds good. I’ll give it a shot.


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This Coda plugin looks like what you want http://tinyurl.com/ddjm2n. Make sure you get the version for Coda 2.

Todd


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I wish CSSEdit was updated instead of Espresso, because as nice as the CSS3 features are in Espresso 2, the interface is nowhere near as usable as CSSEdit 1.

Yeah, brother. I’m so glad I have a CSSEdit license.

Coda is good for front-end stuff and it does have several nice and (to me) useful features like the SubEthaEdit engine, but as someone who’s learning Ruby I find it woefully lacking as an editor. Sublime Text is interesting as is Chocolate but Textmate is hard to beat as a full-on hardcore editor.

Todd


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