Paul Libbrecht wrote:
>
> As long as you rely on the default textarea there's nothing you can do
> there or?
> I wonder if that would not be a topic for the webAPI working group at
> W3C... it is a fairly common request I think.
>
You are speaking fluently about topics to which I have just arriv
But I think it is not an option for most of our users still
reluctant to
use the XWiki environment. And most of them are Internet Explorer,
Firefox and/or Safari users! So Opera or OmniWeb are not an option
so far.
As long as you rely on the default textarea there's nothing you can
do
Paul Libbrecht wrote:
> Ricardo,
>
> that's browser dependent... Opera gives you this service (at least
> searching).
> On Macs OmniWeb gives you it if you open the external text window.
Hi Paul,
I've tried both, Opera in Windows and OmniWeb in Mac. I'm impressed with
OmniWeb performance and t
Paul Libbrecht wrote:
> Ricardo,
>
> that's browser dependent... Opera gives you this service (at least
> searching).
> On Macs OmniWeb gives you it if you open the external text window.
>
> For such intensive changes, using XEclipse application (or plugin)
> really helps. It lacks a goto-line bu
Ricardo,
that's browser dependent... Opera gives you this service (at least
searching).
On Macs OmniWeb gives you it if you open the external text window.
For such intensive changes, using XEclipse application (or plugin)
really helps. It lacks a goto-line but has a search-and-replace.
I
Hi all,
Several users have asked me, and me myself find it quite useful, for
this feature and I don't know if it is possible to find any utility
doing this:
Is it possible to search/replace while editing a document with the wiki
editor? Working in WYSIWYG mode, it is at least possible to use t