>* jump-to-symbol-definition
> - see my post on ST2 in the "is intellij idea a >good idea" thread dated
July 25th.

I checked that post and couldn't see anything about jump to symbol - I'm
mobile though so may have missed something. Can ST2 or 3 do this?

- Korny
 On 28 Jul 2013 04:45, "Greg" <g...@kinostudios.com> wrote:

> Steven:
>
> ST2 has the following features that you wanted:
>
> * paredit or better
> - https://github.com/odyssomay/paredit
> * keyboard shortcuts that dont kill my wrists/pinkies/fingers
> - you can make whatever shortcuts you want
> * jump-to-symbol-definition
> - see my post on ST2 in the "is intellij idea a good idea" thread dated
> July 25th.
> * jump-to-file
> - the built-in "goto anything" works for that, and there are file-specific
> plugins too
> * tabs (a la macvim)
> - not sure what you mean, but there a plugin called "Lispindent" that
> works great
> * splits (a la emacs)
> - not sure what you mean, but there's a "Split Into Lines" command
> * magit or better (might be willing to ignore this omission though)
> - Use these 3 plugins together: GitGutter, Side Bar Git, and SublimeGit
> * not-super-bloated UI
> - ST fits this definition perfectly
> * themeable (dont care if it has a good theme, i can make one if need be,
> i just need it to be themeable)
> - ST is themeable (see my post in the other thread on July 25th)
> * something like nrepl.el
> - ST has SublimeREPL, which has a fork that works with nREPL. Link in the
> other thread.
>
> So.... looks like you're pretty much covered by ST already. :-)
>
> Cheers,
> Greg
>
> --
> Please do not email me anything that you are not comfortable also sharing
> with the NSA.
>
> On Jul 27, 2013, at 11:57 AM, Steven Degutis <sbdegu...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I would be willing to pay /really/ good money for an editor that has a few
> features:
>
> * paredit or better
> * proper syntax highlighting of clojure (emacs rocks at this, ST2 sucks at
> it)
> * ST2-quality fuzzy matching at every completionable prompt (emacs's
> ido-mode is alright but ST2's is way better)
> * keyboard shortcuts that dont kill my wrists/pinkies/fingers
> * jump-to-symbol-definition
> * jump-to-file
> * tabs (a la macvim)
> * splits (a la emacs)
> * magit or better (might be willing to ignore this omission though)
> * not-super-bloated UI
> * themeable (dont care if it has a good theme, i can make one if need be,
> i just need it to be themeable)
> * something like nrepl.el
>
> (where ST2 means Sublime Text 2)
>
> That's *all* I care about, nothing else matters to me. But no editor can
> get *all* these things right.
>
> -Steven
>
>
> On Sat, Jul 27, 2013 at 6:54 AM, Colin Fleming <
> colin.mailingl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I was planning to wait a little longer before going public, but since
>> it's pretty relevant to the other IntelliJ thread going on at the moment I
>> thought I'd jump in. For the last couple of months of happy unemployment
>> I've been working on a fork of La Clojure which is now about 70% migrated
>> to Clojure and significantly improved. It's a lot of work to develop a tool
>> like this, and one of the options I'm considering is starting a company to
>> develop it as a commercial product - JetBrains have never maintained
>> development of La Clojure very actively. I've been doing a little market
>> research but there's really not much data around about whether there are
>> enough people working with Clojure to sustain a product like that, and also
>> the community is currently very focused on open source.
>>
>> One problem is that the IDE space is already fairly fractured - there's
>> Emacs and CCW, Clooj, Sublime Text and the promise of Light Table at some
>> point, and of course the current public version of La Clojure. But there's
>> still not a great option for something that's powerful but easy to use -
>> CCW is probably the closest thing to this right now. However I think it's
>> telling that a large fraction of people in the State of Clojure 2012 survey
>> still identified development tools as a major pain point.
>>
>> I think that the IntelliJ platform is a fantastic base to build something
>> like this on. Clojure as a language makes it pretty challenging to develop
>> a lot of the great functionality that JetBrains are famous for, but I think
>> there's scope to do a lot of great things. Certainly for mixed Clojure/Java
>> projects it would be difficult to beat, but even for Clojure only projects
>> I can imagine a lot of fantastic functionality built on their
>> infrastructure. My plan would be to release a standalone IDE and a plugin
>> for people using IntelliJ Ultimate for web dev, Ruby/Python or whatever.
>> Since it's mostly Clojure now (and I'm migrating what's left as I get to
>> it) there's a real possibility of a Clojure plugin/extension API. I
>> envision charging PyCharm/RubyMine type prices, say $200 for company
>> licenses or $100 for individual developers.
>>
>> So, I'd love to hear what people think. I'd appreciate it if we could
>> stay away from the politics of open source vs proprietary - several people
>> have told me privately that they'd rather use OSS and that's fine,
>> proprietary isn't for everyone. What I'd like to know is if the idea is
>> appealing to many people here?
>>
>> In case it's a concern for anyone, I've discussed this with JetBrains.
>>
>> Thanks for any feedback,
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Colin
>>
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