I'm following the book Concepts, Techniques and Models of Computer Programming.
The code:
{Browse 9*9}
When I select the code and select feed region on OZ menu, the following happens:
{Browse 9*9}
% -------------- accepted
But the Browse window not opens. What's wrong?
I installed emacs 24 and the path for emacs.exe with OZEMACS.
quit and restart oz
Also: select FEED BUFFER, you should be OK
I struggled with using EMacs as an editor for Oz # Mozart. And I ran into issues with being able to use mouse, and being able to launch Mozart Browser window.
I then installed Aquamacs and set the following env variable:
Set Aquamacs as the Mozart emacs editor:
export OZEMACS='/Applications/Aquamacs.app/Contents/MacOS/Aquamacs’
Now, when I run /Applications/Mozart2.app/Contents/Resources/bin/oz it launches Aquamacs where you can see the menu items (top of the monitor) and the Browser window also pops up when using the expression
{Browse 'Hello'}
Related
When I launch libreoffice, either from the openbox applications menu or from the command line, it doesn't display. I only see the libreoffice picture with the loading bar, then it disappears, and that's it, no window at all is displayed. Only when I use the switch-beetween-window keybinding (Alt + Tab) can I see the thumbnails of libreoffice main and the tips windows along with my other open windows thumbnails in the windows-switch menu, but no windows on my desktop nor even any outline of them...
What's more, when I
ps -e | grep libreoffice
no process is returned.
Every other graphical application works well, only libreoffice has theis issue so far.
*I'm using
Debian 11 (5.10162-1) for x86_64
Kernel : 5.10.0-21-amd64
And a minimal desktop environment made of
Openbox 3.6.1 and Polybar 3.5.5*
I tried to run libreoffice in safe mode to override the .config file
libreoffice --safe-mode
Same result.
I tried to reinstall libreoffice, nothing changed.
I'm new to coding Python in VSCode. Previously I used Spyder but decided to move to VSCode as the project management seems better in it (I could easily switch to other files/folders by clicking on the path, just like in PyCharm). But I really need this one workflow which I still have not managed to do it in VSCode.
write some codes like Selenium.
Click run (F5)
The selenium browser opens up.
I could use the Ipython terminal to access the code interactively (find the element in the browser etc) and send new command.
I would like to have this workflow in VSCode. Im also quite overwhelmed by the difference in these 2 IDEs, for example, in VSCode, you have integrated terminal, a debugging console and an output tab, while im used to have only one-for-all Ipython tab.
Ok, I figured out what I need. Basically I just need to right click on the python file that I want to run on the side bar. Then I have to select 'run current file in interactive window'. The only difference is on the Ipython console, I have to use shift+Enter to send my input instead of just clicking enter. But its not a big deal.
I employed the 'Ocean next theme' on alacritty terminal Color schemes · jwilm/alacritty Wiki
Upon starting doom-emacs from terminal (tmux new -s 'main'),
the identical commands emacs -nw display various theme.
I want the one above.
It's tricky that if start a new tmux session with other name saying 'focus',
They display the same themes
Restart the machine multiple times,
my desired theme appears on 'main' session to the above window.
What's the problem?
Your setup has too many layers:
Terminal->Tmux ->Emacs.
Try just running emacs without tmux (emacs has all the tmux goodies integrated) or better run the GUI emacs directly (themes will be in 100% full potential).
BTW, emacs GUI is not like GUI Vim. It's the total package if you run it with exwm.
Take out all decorations (scrool bar menu bar etc..) and it will look like a terminal app except with access to thousands of packages that cannot run in the terminal mode because of limitations.
Once you use it this way. There is no coming back.
My .xinitrc has one line exec emacs (keep in mind you can run firefox inside emacs)
I normally use the WebStorm IDE for Node.js and FE JavaScript development. However I was thinking of using Sublime Text 3 since I am running out of computing power on a crappy old Macbook Pro and ST3 should be lighter on memory and CPU.
However, my one hangup is that ST3 doesn't seem to have a command line terminal integration possible. I find this to be a very useful feature that's available in Eclipse and WebStorm.
I did some Googling and I don't see any great terminal integration plugins for ST3, is there such a thing or not?
Here is WebStorm with the terminal integrated:
Terminus does this. Supports both Unix and Windows. Works great. 👍
In View (on Windows)
Ctrl + Shift + P --> Terminus: Open Default Shell in Tab (View)
In Panel (on Unix)
Ctrl + Shift + P --> Terminus: Open Default Shell in Panel
Type exit to exit and close the terminal opened in a panel.
I installed the Sublime package TerminalView that can show a terminal window within Sublime in a separate tab.
It works with MacOS or Linux but is no longer actively supported.
Installation:
Open the command palette (Cmd+Shift+P on Mac, Ctrl+Shift+P on Windows) and find Package Control: Install Package
Search for TerminalView and hit Return to install.
The terminal windows has a few flaws (at least on macOS) as it seems to conflict with Sublime's keyboard shortcuts. I however use it only to automatically run unit tests when the edited program code changes. Therefore it works just fine. In that case it works best if I show the terminal window below the text editor. You can do so in the menu View > Layout > Rows: 2.
In sublime 3,
ctrl + shift + p search Package Control: Install Package
Search and install TerminalView
to set shortcuts,
go to Preferences -> Key Bindings
on right side Pane paste this,
[
{ "keys": ["ctrl+shift+t"], "command": "terminal_view_open" }
]
Now ctrl+shift+t is your shortcuts
I prefer Terminus and it's the first cross platform terminal for Sublime Text. Check this video it might help you
I tried Sublime package - TerminalView, quickly realized I couldn't copy paste things. Tried on MacOS.
Terminus(https://github.com/randy3k/Terminus ) looks good to me, it has two options
(i) opens in a tab(view)
(ii) opens also in a panel. (which I prefer most)
The below original answer is now outdated; see below answer by Svish.
I was wondering the same thing a while back, and I believe the answer is: no.
There's no good terminal integration in ST3, except, maybe, for Terminal, which simply takes you to the terminal from any given project folder.
Works ok, but not sure how much it really saves.
No way to have it in the ST3 window AFAIK.
I'm looking for a good ssh console plugin for Eclipse, and can't find much at all. Would anyone have some good leads on one?
If you don't like the ssh.shells or ssh.terminals subsystems in Eclipse RSE, try using the Terminal View instead.
Open up Window -> Show View -> Other (or press Shift+Alt+Q then Q)
Type Terminal in the search box
Select the Terminal view listed under the Terminal folder
You'll see a window that looks similar to RSE's ssh.terminals subsystem... but with some extra buttons on the top right.
How to use it:
To fix the scrolling issue (ie: for programs like top), click the Scroll Lock button at the right.
For extra Terminal window tabs, click the down arrow on the New Terminal Connection button
To change the current terminal window's settings, use the Settings button.
If you really like the annoying command input box at the bottom, you can toggle it on and off with the appropriate button.
Change the Background Color:
For some reason, the default setting is to use a terribly hard to see white background. To change this:
Go to Window -> Preferences
Type Terminal in the search box at the top left, or select Terminal on the left.
Check the box that says Invert terminal colors
You can also configure a larger terminal buffer or connection timeouts here
Click Apply
Now the terminal should have a black background! If you want a local terminal, you can enable ssh on your local machine, and connect to localhost.
In Eclipse 3.4.1, there is the Remote Systems Explorer perspective that allows you to create and connect to SSH terminals (here)
There are plugins that exist that allow you up open WinSCP or Putty from within Eclipse.
I would advise maybe doing a search for "putty eclipse plugin" or similar
You can also try the Terminal plug-in for Eclipse
This plug-in provides a fully-working, command-line terminal to
Eclipse 3.7 or later (yes, even 4.2!) It works on Linux and MacOS
only.
More info at: http://alexruiz.developerblogs.com/?p=2428