![]() Fix/ToDo Tracking – Track your coding tasks easily: Ruby, C, Obj-C, C++, and header files will now show commented FIXME and TODO items in the function popup.Character-level Find Differences – Find Differences now uses the system "diff" tool for generating the difference ranges displayed in the application.Modeless Find/Replace Windows – Multi-file search now has a new window of its own, and both the single- and multi-file search windows are modeless, meaning you can work in – and copy from – open text documents without having to close the search window.Integration with MobileMe – If you have a MobileMe account, you can keep your BBEdit preferences and your Application Support folder synchronized across machines, preserving your Text Factories, Clippings, and more.Edit in Results Windows and Disk Browsers – The text views in browsing windows (disk browsers, search results, syntax-check results, and similar) are now editable rather than having to open a file into a new window from such a browser, you can just edit it right there in the window's lower pane.Fortunately, if you're the type that turns your nose up at styled text, it's an easy feature to ignore. The most surprising new feature is the Save as Styled Text option which allows you to save files as a rich text documents – quite a break from BBEdit's long, text-files-only stance. ![]() Other new features include Scratchpad, which the release notes say is "a space where you can manipulate text by performing quick transforms, manual edits, or batches of copy/paste." Bare Bones claims that all the old functionality is still there, but there is one big difference – the search history list is now combined, there's no way to chose a pattern and replacement separately. ![]() The auto-complete features are nice and the hotkey option works well but it would be nice to see some more fine-grained controls – for instance to ability to control the delay time before suggestions pop up or the option to turn it on and off by file type.Īnother very obvious change is the new Find/Replace dialogue which as been greatly simplified, though for longtime BBEdit users it make take a little getting used to. For instance, in the screenshot below, selecting the "stylesheet" option with the "C" graphic next to it would insert a full HTML tag, rather than just completing the word. The best part about autocomplete is that it can also expand code snippets – just look for the "C" graphic in the list.
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