i dont know, but that would be awesome, do you know if aptana has it? i 
never thought of key binding til now in aptana. 
 

Am Mittwoch, 30. Mai 2012 16:19:15 UTC+2 schrieb ke1g:

> Does it do emacs key bindings ;^) 
>
> On Wed, May 30, 2012 at 10:13 AM, Mario Gudelj <mario.gud...@gmail.com> 
> wrote: 
> > It's not free but they have a 30 day trial period 
> > 
> > 
> > On 31 May 2012 00:09, doniyor <doniyor....@googlemail.com> wrote: 
> >> 
> >> @somecallitblues: pycharm is not free, right? but i am really willing 
> to 
> >> give a try for this. i am using for years Aptana studio which is 
> completely 
> >> fullfulling my wishes, but "pycharm loves django" sounds great! 
> >> 
> >> Am Mittwoch, 30. Mai 2012 15:59:13 UTC+2 schrieb somecallitblues: 
> >>> 
> >>> You seriously have to give PyCharm a go. It's everything IDE should be 
> >>> and loves django. 
> >>> 
> >>> On 30 May 2012 23:40, Bill Freeman <ke1g...@gmail.com> wrote: 
> >>>> 
> >>>> On Mon, May 28, 2012 at 12:25 PM, Dennis Lee Bieber 
> >>>> <wlfr...@ix.netcom.com> wrote: 
> >>>> > On Mon, 28 May 2012 05:37:43 -0700 (PDT), coded kid 
> >>>> > <duffleboi...@gmail.com> declaimed the following in 
> >>>> > gmane.comp.python.django.user: 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> >> I'm in a big mess now, I've lost my projects due to this errror. 
> I'm 
> >>>> >> on windows, This is how I encounter the problem; I try to edit my 
> >>>> >> settings.py in IDLE. After right clicking on the files, I choose 
> open 
> >>>> >> program with these default file. I choose idle window bat file, 
> and I 
> >>>> >> clicked Ok. It didn't open, I try to run manage.py runserver on my 
> >>>> >> DOS. Not working, it will pop up the IDLE Shell and mange.py 
> script 
> >>>> >> by 
> >>>> >> displaying it in IDLE. It didn't run the server. The logo of my 
> >>>> >> python 
> >>>> >> files have changed. How can I revert it back to open with IDLE? 
> And 
> >>>> >> use it as default for my python script? 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> >        IDLE itself is a Python script; though it sounds like you 
> (or 
> >>>> > someone) created a Windows BAT file to act as an intermediate. 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> >        The main problem appears to be that you've associated the 
> >>>> > "open" 
> >>>> > action with /IDLE/... The normal "open" action for Python (.py) 
> script 
> >>>> > files should be Python.exe (or Pythonw.exe for .pyw). For editing 
> you 
> >>>> > should have/create a <right-click>"Edit" action that invokes your 
> IDLE 
> >>>> > BAT file. 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> >        You'll need to work with the file association commands in 
> >>>> > Windows to 
> >>>> > reset things so that "open" means RUN the script. 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> >        Unfortunately, different installations have used different 
> >>>> > names for 
> >>>> > the file types. Here are mine (I had to do "ftype" with no 
> arguments 
> >>>> > and 
> >>>> > scan the long output to find the Python entries): 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> > E:\UserData\Wulfraed\My Documents>ftype py_auto_file 
> >>>> > py_auto_file="E:\Python25\python.exe" "%1" %* 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> > E:\UserData\Wulfraed\My Documents>ftype pyw_auto_file 
> >>>> > pyw_auto_file="E:\Python25\pythonw.exe" "%1" 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> >        Note that ftype only defines the "open"/"run" action for a 
> >>>> > file. 
> >>>> > (Interesting -- the .pyw doesn't take command line arguments, 
> probably 
> >>>> > to be expected for a double-click open). 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> >        The other half of the basic equation is the file extension 
> to 
> >>>> > "file 
> >>>> > type" association: 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> > E:\UserData\Wulfraed\My Documents>assoc .py 
> >>>> > .py=py_auto_file 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> > E:\UserData\Wulfraed\My Documents>assoc .pyc 
> >>>> > File association not found for extension .pyc 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> > E:\UserData\Wulfraed\My Documents>assoc .pyw 
> >>>> > .pyw=pyw_auto_file 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> > (This is why I commented that the file type name may differ between 
> >>>> > installs -- the assoc is 
> >>>> >        <.extension> = <file type> 
> >>>> > and ftype is 
> >>>> >        <file type> = <command line to execute> 
> >>>> > As long as the same <file type> is used in both commands the 
> linkage 
> >>>> > works) 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> >        That SHOULD clear up the 
> double-click/<right-click>Open/command 
> >>>> > line 
> >>>> > running of Python scripts. Setting up an Edit action (on WinXP) 
> >>>> > requires 
> >>>> > going through either the registry by hand, or opening a directory 
> >>>> > window, 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> > Tools/Folder Options 
> >>>> > File Types (tab) 
> >>>> >        scroll down to PY and PYW entries, select one 
> >>>> >        Details should show "Opens with: python" (or pythonw) 
> >>>> > [Advanced] 
> >>>> >        the default action should be "open" (bold). If there is no 
> >>>> > "edit" 
> >>>> > action, click [New...] 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> >        Give it Action name "edit" (or "edit with IDLE") 
> >>>> >        Application used to perform action: full path to the 
> IDLE.BAT 
> >>>> > file 
> >>>> > (in quotes) followed by "%1" (with quotes) for the argument 
> >>>> > placeholder 
> >>>> > (the file to be edited). 
> >>>> >        Might need to [x] Use DDE; set "Application" to IDLE, set 
> Topic 
> >>>> > to 
> >>>> > System 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> > {NOTE: I'm paraphrasing from the edit action on my system which 
> uses 
> >>>> > "E:\Python25\Lib\site-packages\pythonwin\Pythonwin.exe" "%1"} 
> >>>> > {I'm not sure if you could skip the BAT file and use 
> >>>> >        "path/to/python.exe" "path/to/IDLE.py" "%1" 
> >>>> > instead} 
> >>>> > 
> >>>> > -- 
> >>>> >        Wulfraed                 Dennis Lee Bieber         AF6VN 
> >>>> >        wlfr...@ix.netcom.com    HTTP://wlfraed.home.netcom.com/ 
> >>>> 
> >>>> Last I used it (I've been blessedly Windows free for some time now), 
> >>>> IDLE's editor was fine for editing Python (everyone has their own 
> >>>> favorite code editor), at least giving nice syntax highlighting and 
> >>>> correct (for Python) treatment of the tab key.  But it is not really 
> >>>> an IDE (except maybe for projects that are one file, or maybe one 
> >>>> folder). 
> >>>> 
> >>>> I'm sure that there are many fine Windows specific solutions. 
> >>>> (Someone mentioned NOTEPAD++.  I can't comment, but the list is 
> pretty 
> >>>> good at that sort of judgement.)  But let me suggest that you learn 
> to 
> >>>> use a tool that is available on multiple platforms.  (If you deploy a 
> >>>> site commercially, your costs, flexibility, and perhaps performance, 
> >>>> will likely be better on a Linux or BSD based VPS or shared host.) 
>  My 
> >>>> personal favorite is emacs, but it can be easier to use vim remotely, 
> >>>> and it is more likely to be pre-installed.  Yes, there are native 
> >>>> Windows implementations of both, independent of running builds of 
> *nix 
> >>>> configurations under cygwin.  While IDLE does run everywhere, it 
> >>>> requires access to the GUI, which can be annoying on a VPS.  Though 
> >>>> you can edit locally and push your changes to your VPS using your 
> >>>> revision control system, there are just some times that you have to 
> >>>> edit on your VPS via an SSH terminal connection. 
> >>>> 
> >>>> Beware, if you go with vim, that you will have to add plugins to make 
> >>>> it really Python friendly (emacs comes with a python mode).  At a 
> >>>> minimum, you should configure vim to always insert spaces when you 
> hit 
> >>>> the TAB key.  Without further information, Python will interpret tab 
> >>>> characters as going to the next every 8 column tab stop, while many 
> >>>> modern editors have lost there way, and use tabs as though the stops 
> >>>> were every 4 characters.  Indentation is meaningful in Python, so it 
> >>>> causes mysterious problems if there are two lines that you think have 
> >>>> the same indentation, but python things are different (or vice versa) 
> >>>> because one uses tab characters and the other is all spaces. 
> >>>> 
> >>>> There are also some fine commercial, cross platform, offerings.  I'm 
> >>>> told that Wing IDE even has good Django template modes, and does have 
> >>>> the chops to run Django from within it. 
> >>>> 
> >>>> Bill 
> >>>> 
> >>>> Also, Django isn't really a click to run kind of application.  During 
> >>>> development it really should be run from a command prompt. 
> >>>> 
> >>>> -- 
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> >>>> 
> >>> 
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> > 
> > 
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