A (Racket) script that calls "open" (on a mac) and uses some state to keep
track of what "next" means seems straightforward. Probably this can also be
integrated via quickscript so It becomes a key binding. And maybe you want
some small number of key bindings that assign grades and then move on to
I would love that, but they’re not all in one directory. Maybe the easiest
solution would be to write a script to temporarily move them all into one
directory. In fact, as I think about this harder, I realize that the biggest
problem may be that Apple’s file dialog doesn’t facilitate moving alon
Ah, got it. Well, as to opening all the files, you can select them all in
Finder and Cmd+O. (Presumably the equivalent works on Windows.) Can't help
you with the aesthetics, sorry.
On Tue, Apr 21, 2020 at 4:38 PM John Clements
wrote:
> Well, sure… once you open all the files. Opening all the f
Well, sure… once you open all the files. Opening all the files is the painful
part. Also, the display of tabs is not totally great when you have sixty or
seventy of them open. Sorry, it might not have been clear that I want a list of
sixty or seventy files.
John
> On Apr 21, 2020, at 1:34 PM,
I don't use DrRacket much, but would the normal 'previous / next window'
commands work for you? On Mac it's:
previous window: Shft + Cmd + ~
next window: Cmd + ~
or
previous window: Cmd +
next window: Cmd +
On Tue, Apr 21, 2020 at 4:29 PM 'John Clements' via Racket Users <
racket-users@googl
Here’s a question I have about both DrRacket and Emacs. It often happens in my
workflow (grading files, for instance) that I want to set up a list of files,
and then have an easy way to move forward or back in that list (“next file”,
“previous file”). I see that emacs has a function called “next
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