From: Gruber Gerhard Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp Subject: RHIDE 1.14 report Date: Thu, 19 Feb 1998 11:48:05 +0100 Organization: APAnet Lines: 47 Message-ID: <34EC0DE5.5F7A5848@sis.co.at> NNTP-Posting-Host: 192.56.14.75 Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp Precedence: bulk When I switch to overwrite mode in RHIDE the behaviour is somewhat annoying. I have activated "optimal fill" and "use tabs" and I'm used to it, by the Borland environment, that "optimal fill" is only applied to leading blanks. Rhide takes it literally and fills also in between blanks. This leads to the behaviour that if I create commentlines for headers and switch to overwrite mode that tabs get substituted by the characters I write (that's ok). BUT! :) this means that characters at the end jump toward the lead because one tab stands for multiple characters. /****************************************************/ /* */ /* Comment x */ /* */ /****************************************************/ I'm using headers like this to document functions. In this case all blanks are substituted by an appropriate number of tabs. Now when i place the cursor after 'x' and type a new character, this means that the tab, that holds that position will be subsituted and the trailing '*/' jumps. Looks like this then. /****************************************************/ /* */ /* Comment xx */ /* */ /****************************************************/ When you continue writing this continues as more tabs get substituted. This is not really a bug but it is annyoing. :) I'm using a standard template for this headers and usually I copy the empty template and fill it out. Now I'd have to manually refill the blanks to have a proper appearance. -- Bye, Gerhard email: gruber2 AT eunet DOT at g DOT gruber AT sis DOT co DOT at FIDO: Gruber_Gerhard AT 2:310/81.11 Harrison's postulate: For every action, there is an equal and opposite criticism.