Thanks for all the ideas. In a little more detail, I manage a fairly
low-traffic site. I know I could copy everything to a sandbox
directory and test in there, but then I've got to also direct my
client apps to use the sandbox. Time-consuming. Sometimes when I
need to make a relatively small
Anyhow, I understand the limitations and workarounds now. Just now, I
was able to finally get a clean syntax check after downloading a few
files and also spending about 10 minutes with CPAN. It's not an ideal
world, but I get by.
Do you have ssh access to the server?
If you do you can try
At 6:55 PM -0700 on 05/08/2010, Jerry Krinock wrote about Re:
Remotely Edit Perl: Syntax check barfs on 'use' other R:
Thanks for all the ideas. In a little more detail, I manage a fairly
low-traffic site. I know I could copy everything to a sandbox
directory and test in there, but then I've
My favorite BBEdit feature is the ability to access documents on FTP
servers in the File menu. But syntax checking is broken for perl
scripts if they have 'use' directives other scripts on the server. It
quits with Can't find in INC
I believe the reason is that BBEdit makes a local copy of
On Sun, May 02, 2010 at 06:12:08PM -0700, Jerry Krinock wrote:
My favorite BBEdit feature is the ability to access documents on FTP
servers in the File menu. But syntax checking is broken for perl
scripts if they have 'use' directives other scripts on the server. It
quits with Can't find in
Jerry,
I suggest that you use CPAN and install the modules you need on your local
machine. This allows you to not only do syntax checking, but functionality
checking
locally as well.
Matt
On May 2, 2010, at 9:12 PM, Jerry Krinock wrote:
My favorite BBEdit feature is the ability to
Good afternoon,
On 2/05/10 at 6:12 PM -0700, Jerry Krinock je...@ieee.org wrote:
My favorite BBEdit feature is the ability to access documents on FTP
servers in the File menu. But syntax checking is broken for perl
scripts if they have 'use' directives other scripts on the server. It
quits