As you are replying to my email I guess you have some feedback or request about 
my bundle.

Honestly I haven’t understood a thing after reading your reply once. I’ll try 
to read it more times later.

Cheers
Uko

On 21 Apr 2014, at 15:06, Robert Shiplett <[email protected]> wrote:

> re: textmite
> 
> Q : what is currently the best Unicode text "notes 
> collator"/editor/formatter/previewer/printer/versioning-compat app written in 
> a Smalltalk dialect ?  Any one component of the above ?  RTF text 
> editing/formatting widget?
> 
> Sketch/draw/coloring app ? Check.
> complex telco routing app ? Check.
> multi-dim data visualization app ? Check.
> real-time high-speed robotic arm/articulated-joint controller app ? Check.
> 
> Can anything be learned from the successes/issues of the Sciter 
> editor/component project ?
> 
> ( was just remembering when the Norton Programmer Editor came WITH the 
> assembler code )
> 
> Is there an open source Objective-C variant of a decent Mac editor ?
> 
> ( as TextMate is SOooo far from being cross-platform, right ? )
> 
> It is not enough for an editor to "consume" TextMate templates, is it ? ( an 
> analogy that likely would not be irritating to others escapes me at the 
> moment ... )
> 
> Are constraints behavior what makes good editors so difficult to maintain ? ( 
> assuming elegant/extensible constraints modelling and resolution IS the app 
> challenge for text formatting for  WYSIWYG approvals )
> 
> Is there now a constraint resolution module callable from a Smalltalk dialect 
> ?
> 
> I am using a graphical programming language that has 2 approaches to 
> constraints for text layout : one you get to tinker about in an API, one you 
> get to request layout for text/font/font_attribs and you accept the results ( 
> the Alan Knight O-O no-internals-SVP version ? )
> 
> A pythonic quasi-logic language with minimalist constraints for Unicode text 
> is under development in UK ; I am alpha testing one such non-graphical 
> prgrm'g lang for Unicode text-only from USA, but it is NOT cross platform 
> oddly enough; Logtalk + swi-prolog also has constraints handling ;  
> typed-Prolog AKA Mercury gen's C or Erlang ; Oz has gone quiet since 1.4 and 
> Lively Kernel ?  I have lost track of Croquet.  User-friendly Scheme is now 
> called Racket, btw.  And "Claire", the lang ? Alice ?
> 
> [ by way of explanation : this Monday is a bank-holiday here, but the nearest 
> beaches have ice piled on them and its some other holiday in USA ; now for 
> morning java ( as in coffee ) ]  Isn't "brackets" some editor project ?
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> On 21 April 2014 07:25, Yuriy Tymchuk <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
> > On 20 Apr 2014, at 12:22, Norbert Hartl <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > What does it do?
> 
> For now on - syntax highlighting. I'll try to add more features in future
> 
> Uko
> 
> >
> > Norbert
> >
> >> Am 20.04.2014 um 08:35 schrieb Yuriy Tymchuk <[email protected]>:
> >>
> >> Dear guys who use Pillar.
> >>
> >> I’m happy to announce that I’ve created a small bundle for TextMate. You 
> >> can find it here: https://github.com/Uko/Pillar.tmbundle
> >>
> >> Also I’ve exported it to ATOM (new editor from github) package, but it’s 
> >> crappy because ATOM lacks some stuff right not. Package is called: 
> >> language-pillar, source is here: https://github.com/Uko/language-pillar
> >>
> >> I will be happy to hear your feedback, and add more features.
> >>
> >> Happy Easter!
> >> Uko
> >>
> >> P.S. (won’t be online for ≈30hours)
> >
> 
> 

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