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I agree with your suggestions, Dan. Though, I'd add one thing: The
only thing I use the line numbers for is RRT/LLT blocks to changing the
indenting level of code (shift the code to the right/left.) LPEX should
have another way of doing that. (Or, maybe it does, but is really hard
to find?)
I agree with pretty much everything you said here, though I do not use
the "wonderful Java editors" you reference.
Especially the enter key breaking the line -- this drives me up the
friggin' wall.
On 12/18/2012 9:29 AM, Dan Kimmel wrote:
The LPEX editors in RDP are fairly awful and need to be improved.--
Those of us who work regularly in wonderful Java editors in the very
same RDP workspace are always aghast at just how clunky and awkward
LPEX is.
My suggestions:
Get rid of the line numbers on the left. I have a mouse; I don't need
CC,CC,A to copy a section of code. It's an SEU throwback that is in
the way of progress.
Put in a descent find/replace with regex support. Make it a popup
window instead of that silly box at the bottom. Don't reposition my
code/cursor when I hit ctrl-f.
Keep the outline up-to-date. I don't want to wait while an outline
generates.
The enter key should break the line at the position of the cursor. If
I want five blank lines, I'll hit the enter key five times.
Come up with some annotation comments and link them to the editor so
I can hover the mouse cursor over, say, a sub-procedure name and the
comments block (perhaps from some other source member) is diplayed in
a temporary text box. Use the javadoc methods, if necessary.
I can come up with more. I'll bet others have favorites, too.
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