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authorLeo Tenenbaum <pommicket@gmail.com>2021-04-16 16:34:57 -0400
committerLeo Tenenbaum <pommicket@gmail.com>2021-04-16 16:34:57 -0400
commit4666383f063ca56ba0ef1e5b42003b3096f443b1 (patch)
treee970e42b239a3ff2da0fdafc833dc5a80a65444b /README.md
parentd76fb30c7f8e073dd17180752dbd56dfa62511d3 (diff)
update readme with new stuff
Diffstat (limited to 'README.md')
-rw-r--r--README.md17
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
index ef77b2c..3c576e5 100644
--- a/README.md
+++ b/README.md
@@ -16,14 +16,13 @@ and performs well on reasonably-sized files.
ted isn't incredibly complicated, but it does have some nice features you might not find
in other editors.
-## Supported features (more coming soon)
-
-All the keybindings listed below are customizable!
+## Supported features
+- Customization of (pretty much) all colours and keyboard commands.
+- Basic stuff like copy+paste, undo+redo, etc.
- Multiple tabs, each with a different file
-- Split screen (Ctrl+/, Ctrl+Shift+/)
+- Split screen (default: Ctrl+\, Ctrl+Shift+\)
- Auto-indent
-- Customization of (pretty much) all colours and keyboard commands.
- Syntax highlighting for C, C++, Rust, and Python.
- Find and replace (with regular expressions!)
- Run build command (F4), go to errors
@@ -31,11 +30,12 @@ All the keybindings listed below are customizable!
- Go to definition (Ctrl+click)
- Go to line (Ctrl+G)
- Autocomplete (Ctrl+Space)
+- Indent/dedent selection (Tab, Shift+Tab), comment/uncomment selection (Ctrl+/)
## Getting started with ted
After installing ted, you can just start using it like you would any other editor. The keyboard shortcuts
-are mostly what you'd expect them to be (Ctrl+o for open, Ctrl+s for save, etc.).
+are mostly what you'd expect them to be (Ctrl+o for open, Ctrl+n for new, Ctrl+s for save, etc.).
### Tips
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ are mostly what you'd expect them to be (Ctrl+o for open, Ctrl+s for save, etc.)
check out all of the keyboard shortcuts!
- You can use Ctrl+f for "find", but if you want to search for something across multiple files, you can do
Ctrl+! (run shell command), then run `grep -n search_term *.py`, for example (on Windows, you will need to have
-cygwin or something in your PATH for this to work). The `-n` ensures that
+cygwin or something in your PATH for this to work). The `-n` ensures that
ted can jump to the results, just like jumping to build errors.
### Configuration
@@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ If a `Cargo.toml` file exists in this directory or one of its parents, F4 will r
in the `[core]` section of the config file.
Jump to definition and autocompletion both depend on [ctags](https://github.com/universal-ctags/ctags). You can press Ctrl+T
-at any time to generate tags for all files in the current directory. Once you have a tags file, you can Ctrl+Click on an identifier
+at any time to generate or re-generate tags. Once you have a tags file, you can Ctrl+Click on an identifier
to go to its definition. You can also press Ctrl+D to get a searchable list of all functions/types where you can select one to go to
its definition. Press Ctrl+space to autocomplete. If there is only one possible completion from the tags file, it will be selected automatically.
Otherwise, you'll get a popup showing all possible completions. You can press tab to select a completion (or click on it), and press
@@ -114,7 +114,6 @@ Extract the zip, copy SDL2-2.x.y into the ted directory, and rename it to SDL2.
to the ted directory.
You will also need PCRE2. Download it here: https://ftp.pcre.org/pub/pcre/pcre2-10.36.zip,
unzip it, and put pcre2-10.36 in the same folder as ted.
-
Then run `make.bat`.
## Version history