> There also a 'Last Edit Location' shortcut

That's cool and useful. I think Xcode also remembers the scroll state  
of documents.

It would be great to see ASDT back on track. I tried so hard to get  
it to work properly way back and it seemed buggy and unreliable and  
in the end I didn't feel like I could trust it. Which is how I got  
into Xcode.

> i code twice as fast with the JDT

I guess anything this has would be as useful to an AS developer...

Looking forward!
Andrew

On 4 Sep 2006, at 22:25, Martin Wood wrote:

>
>
> Andrew Eatherington wrote:
>> Re-factoring is a good one.
>> Picking up methods from an import and core classes (auto-sense).
>> Syntax and error handling from mtasc (click and go to line) - is this
>> already there?
>>
>> A feature I like in Xcode is a droplist of methods within a class and
>> a history droplist (would probably be very valuable in complex
>> projects) with a next/previous file edited.
>
> Im not sure if its the same but eclipse has built in support for  
> prev / next
> navigation
>
> 'Workbench editors keep a navigation history. If  you open a second  
> editor while
> you're editing, you can press Navigate > Backward (Alt+Left Arrow,  
> or the  back
> arrow on the workbench toolbar) to go back to the last editor. This  
> makes
> working with several open editors a whole lot easier'
>
> Alt+Right Arrow goes forwards.
>
> There also a 'Last Edit Location' shortcut which is really handy  
> when you start
> typing then move off somewhere else looking for something you need  
> to know and
> want to jump back to the edit easily.
>
>
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