FROM : Dave Payne
DATE : Sat Nov 23 14:47:06 2002
In the next release of Project Builder, we have an option to display
line numbers next to each line.
Sorry, as per standard Apple policy, I can't say when the next release
will ship.
Apple's <email_removed> list is also a good place
to ask PB, IB, or gcc questions. Go to lists.apple.com to sign up for
it or other Apple lists.
- Dave
Eric Peyton wrote:
> I think what he is asking for is the ability to see line numbers next
> to each row of his code. That is not possible in current Project
> Builder edit windows.
>
> You can see what line the cursor is on currently by looking at the top
> of the Project Builder edit window (After the filename:).
>
> You can also see what line(s) is(are) selected by opening the Go to
> line window (Cmd-l). Here you can see a display like 10:23 if lines
> 10-23 are selected.
>
> However neither of those are a replacement for line numbers next to
> your source code.
>
> Eric
>
>
> On Friday, November 22, 2002, at 02:49 PM, Vonleigh Simmons wrote:
>
>> To give some info, to go to a specific line, Apple-L (go to line) is
>> your man.
>>
>>> It is not possible.
>>>> I realize that this is probably a very newbie question for
>>>> ProjectBuilder, but how do I make PB display the line numbers in my
>>>> files? Please tell me it is possible.
DATE : Sat Nov 23 14:47:06 2002
In the next release of Project Builder, we have an option to display
line numbers next to each line.
Sorry, as per standard Apple policy, I can't say when the next release
will ship.
Apple's <email_removed> list is also a good place
to ask PB, IB, or gcc questions. Go to lists.apple.com to sign up for
it or other Apple lists.
- Dave
Eric Peyton wrote:
> I think what he is asking for is the ability to see line numbers next
> to each row of his code. That is not possible in current Project
> Builder edit windows.
>
> You can see what line the cursor is on currently by looking at the top
> of the Project Builder edit window (After the filename:).
>
> You can also see what line(s) is(are) selected by opening the Go to
> line window (Cmd-l). Here you can see a display like 10:23 if lines
> 10-23 are selected.
>
> However neither of those are a replacement for line numbers next to
> your source code.
>
> Eric
>
>
> On Friday, November 22, 2002, at 02:49 PM, Vonleigh Simmons wrote:
>
>> To give some info, to go to a specific line, Apple-L (go to line) is
>> your man.
>>
>>> It is not possible.
>>>> I realize that this is probably a very newbie question for
>>>> ProjectBuilder, but how do I make PB display the line numbers in my
>>>> files? Please tell me it is possible.
| Related mails | Author | Date |
|---|---|---|
| Weston Houghton | Nov 22, 12:19 | |
| Eric Peyton | Nov 22, 12:26 | |
| Martin-Gilles Lavo… | Nov 22, 12:41 | |
| Vonleigh Simmons | Nov 22, 12:49 | |
| Eric Peyton | Nov 22, 12:58 | |
| Parmadil Istarion | Nov 22, 15:19 | |
| Dave Payne | Nov 23, 14:47 |






Cocoa mail archive

