This is actually a feature of ESS (http://ess.r-project.org), available for all flavors of Emacs.
For me, this is also the "way to go". And for submitting without stepping to the next command, there's always C-c C-j. Vincent Le mer. 05 mars à 05:46, MHH Stevens a écrit : > In Aquamacs, I most often use C-c C-n; this submits a line and step > to next. I like it because I can keep my left pinkie finger on the > Crtl key to execute it. (I am not much of a typist). > Hank > On Mar 5, 2008, at 4:44 AM, Tim Cole wrote: > >> I can see the benefit of single stepping in some cases, but I >> wouldn't want to lose the current behaviour. >> >> Whiile on the subject, cmd-return has an odd feature. Once a line has >> been submitted using cmd-return, it needs two returns not one to move >> from the end of the line to the next. I suspect this is not intended >> - can it be changed? >> >> Thanks, >> Tim >> >> On 05/03/2008, at 5:03 AM, Duncan Murdoch wrote: >> >>> On 3/4/2008 2:31 PM, Simon Urbanek wrote: >>>> Rune, >>>> >>>> On Mar 4, 2008, at 1:12 PM, Rune Maagensen wrote: >>>> >>>>> I've just started using R 2.62 on OSX 10.4.11 on a macbook 2,1 and >>>>> found that in the Editor on Windows ctrl-R runs the current >>>>> line and >>>>> goes to the next line. On Mac cmd-return runs the current line and >>>>> stays there. Shouldn't the cursor go to the next line, so a >>>>> program >>>>> can be run stepwise with multiple cmd-rtn instead of cmd-rtn down- >>>>> arrow? >>>>> >>>> >>>> It was not designed to do so, but clearly it could be changed, I'm >>>> not sure it's good idea, though, as it combines an action >>>> (execute a >>>> line) with a change of selection and that is usually not >>>> desirable (I >>>> know that WIndows is known to breach UI design principles all over >>>> the >>>> place, but that's another story). Most commonly one uses >>>> selection to >>>> select the program/function that will be run instead and you don't >>>> want to change the position there. Any comments on this from other >>>> users? >>> >>> In Windows the mental image is that there are two functions attached >>> to >>> Ctrl-R: >>> >>> - if something is selected, then submit it. >>> - if not, then single step through the script. >>> >>> The second function is what Rune is asking about. I'd say it's good >>> to >>> have a "single step" function on a key. It doesn't need to be the >>> same >>> key as "submit the selection", but it doesn't seem to lead to >>> confusion >>> if it is. >>> >>> On a Mac in the Xcode debugger, what's the key for single stepping? >>> (My >>> Mac is at home, I can't check.) It would make a lot of sense to use >>> that key for single stepping in the script editor too. >> -- >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] Phone +44(0)20 7905 2666 Fax +44(0)20 7905 >> 2381 >> Paed. Epid. & Biostats, UCL Institute of Child Health, London WC1N >> 1EH, UK >> >> _______________________________________________ >> R-SIG-Mac mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-mac > > Dr. Hank Stevens, Assistant Professor > 338 Pearson Hall > Botany Department > Miami University > Oxford, OH 45056 > > Office: (513) 529-4206 > Lab: (513) 529-4262 > FAX: (513) 529-4243 > http://www.cas.muohio.edu/~stevenmh/ > http://www.cas.muohio.edu/ecology > http://www.muohio.edu/botany/ > > "If the stars should appear one night in a thousand years, how would > men > believe and adore." -Ralph Waldo Emerson, writer and philosopher > (1803-1882) > > _______________________________________________ > R-SIG-Mac mailing list > [email protected] > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-mac _______________________________________________ R-SIG-Mac mailing list [email protected] https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-mac
