Hey Steve, Yep we do have a wiki, we can use. The Eclipse Foundation hosts pages for dash here:
http://wiki.eclipse.org/Dash_Project It looks like it could use some help. ;) You can login with a Bugzilla account (all you have to do it register) to edit pages. Cheers, Karl Steve Corwin wrote: > A wiki would be perfect: the markup is more than sufficient, and it > allows for easy collaboration between multiple people. Which leads to > the next question: do we have one we can use? > > -Steve > > Nick Boldt wrote: >> How about wiki markup? Easy to write, easy to edit, easy to >> contribute... hell, there's even a wiki editor for Eclipse! [1] >> >> [1] http://www.plog4u.org/index.php/Using_Eclipse_Wikipedia_Editor >> <http://www.plog4u.org/index.php/Using_Eclipse_Wikipedia_Editor> >> >> Nick >> >> On Nov 7, 2007 8:12 PM, Steve Corwin <[EMAIL PROTECTED] >> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote: >> >> [I just saw Paul's email after I finished typing this. So, for >> whatever >> it's worth, here's what I have so far.] >> >> I've been mostly using the >> org.eclipse.eclipsemonkey.lang.javascript.doms.editors.Editor class, >> which is what you get from this line: >> var sourceEditor = editors.activeEditor; >> >> Here's a stab at documenting it: >> >> Properties: >> Read-only: >> id: ? >> lineDelimiter: the correct End of Line characters for the current >> file? >> source: the current contents of the editor, as a Java String. >> sourceLength: the length of the current contents of the editor. >> selectionRange: the range of text that is currently selected in the >> editor. It contains two integers, startingOffset and endingOffset. >> These may be used to find the selected text within the source >> property. >> If nothing is selected endingOffset == startingOffset. >> title: ? >> textEditor: ? >> >> Read/write: >> currentOffset: ? >> >> Functions: >> applyEdit(int offset, int deleteLength, String insertText): >> Used to insert and/or delete text. offset is a position within the >> source property. deleteLength is the length of the existing text to >> remove; use 0 to not delete anything. insertText is text to >> insert at >> offset; use "" to not insert anything. >> >> beginCompoundChange(): ? >> close(boolean save): close the current editor, saving its contents if >> save == true? >> endCompoundChange(): ? >> getLineAtOffset(int offset): returns the number of the line that >> contains offset. >> getOffsetAtLine(final int line): returns the offset of the first >> character in line line. >> save(): saves the current contents of the editor? >> selectAndReveal(final int offset, final int length): selects the text >> starting at offset and ending at (offset + length). Will scroll the >> text as needed to make the selection visible on screen. length >> may be 0 >> to force a line to be visible without selecting anything. >> toString(): returns "[object Editor]" >> >> Naturally, suggestions and corrections would be welcome. It would >> certainly be better to have more formatting options than plain >> text. I >> thought about writing Javadoc in Editor.java, but that's not an easy >> place for a newcomer to find and understand. >> >> -Steve >> >> _______________________________________________ >> dash-dev mailing list >> dash-dev@eclipse.org <mailto:dash-dev@eclipse.org> >> https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/dash-dev >> >> >> >> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> >> _______________________________________________ >> dash-dev mailing list >> dash-dev@eclipse.org >> https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/dash-dev > _______________________________________________ > dash-dev mailing list > dash-dev@eclipse.org > https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/dash-dev _______________________________________________ dash-dev mailing list dash-dev@eclipse.org https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/dash-dev