In Perl, I define a module `M.pm` with a shared variable `$foo`:
```
package M;
our $foo = 'something';
1;
```
which I then can use, with a full path, in some other file `f.pl`:
```
use M;
print "The value is $M::foo\n";
1;
```
In the print line, Geany syntax-highlights `$M` but it is supposed to highlight `$M::foo` as that is the name of the symbol.
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I have a shell script, marked with `#!/bin/sh`, in which a `'` inside a comment confuses geany's syntax parser and makes it believe this comment does not end. The minimal example I can come up with is:
```
#!/bin/sh
a=$(
# '
echo 'Yo'
)
echo 'not a comment!'
```
Note, that outside of `$(...)` the use of `# '` is treated correctly.
This is with geany 1.32 (built on 2017-11-21 with GTK 2.24.31, GLib 2.54.0) on archlinux.
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In geany .sh file have a syntax highlighting that's not quite good, compared i.e. to other editors like sublime. In particular when you have $(...) things inside the parenthesis are all colored in orange.
Geany version: 1.31
Color combination: default
GTK version: 2.24.31
O.S.: Ubuntu 17.10
filetype: .sh
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Hello geany devs,
Before I describe this feature request, I am finally using geany AND also learning C++ (slowly ...). C++ is a lot more annoying than ruby but I guess the really interesting things are all in C/C++, so I knew I had to learn C and/or C++ eventually. But I digress.
To the topic:
- Currently, latest geany, you can easily change the size of the current tab.
That is, the content of that tab. So I can increase the font via pressing strg
on my german layout keyboard (I guess this is ... control key? Very bottom
left), then hit the mouse scrollwheel; upwards scrolling makes the font size
larger. Downwards scrolling decreases font size.
This is GOOD and CONVENIENT. But I have one problem:
- Only the CURRENT tab is changed, not the other tabs. So this means
that the corrent font size is in the current tab, but not the other tabs.
My proposal is thus to:
- Enable users to change the font size in all tabs simultaenously.
This should be trivial in that we could send the same command/event
to all tabs, I think. (I know gtk only via the ruby-gtk bindings, but I
remember that the gtk notebook tab would often keep all tabs as
an array and one can address them and the buffer content).
So I think in theory, this feature should be trivial.
What may not be trivial is that perhaps some users may like the
existing behaviour, I have no idea. I don't mind to retain the current
status quo by the way, it is fine - but I would like to at the least
have an ADDITIONAL way to specify so that I can change all
tabs simultaneously.
I am not sure how to enable this best, but I will make two suggestions
and I am sure IF it is a worthwhile change, the geany devs will
think of an appropriate way (or another way; I am just trying
to give ideas):
a) the simple one is to add a checkbox to options/preferences, something
such as "synchronize changes to the font size" checkbox [yes/no] boolean
flag, and a tooltip that says something like "Enabling this checkbox will
apply font size changes to all tabs, not only the currently active tab." -
or something like that.
b) another option may be to add another keybinding. For example, strg
+ mouse wheel currently works; we could add ANOTHER key to this
such as ctrl+shift+mouse wheel combination. Or any other key -
I don't mind so much which key. (Should be documented somewhere
of course.)
of course (a) and (b) can also be combined so both could be added. I
only wanted to provide a few ideas here. :)
Thanks for reading, feel free to close this issue at any moment in
time!
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For example `10.5`. Some other editors accept that value.
Thanks :-)
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Using geany plugins 1.26, from Ubuntu packages:
When I type (, Geany shows ()). The same for [, { and <.
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The feature to jump to after the auto-closed character when pressing tab doesn't work properly with the curly braces. Steps to reproduce:
1. Type a `{` so that `{}` results
2. Press enter, which will push the `}` down two lines and your cursor down one, and indent your cursor.
3. Press Tab. Your cursor will move down a line, but it will be _before_ the closing brace rather than after it.
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I'm using Geany while writing Go code and it's vital to have some commands (like golint and gofmt) to be launched periodically. As Geany doesn't allow me to execute command for every CTRL+S press (or I don't know how to do that), it's good to have an ability to write custom commands and bind them to a hotkey. But this is configurable only per-project, and what if I have 10 projects in workbench? I will configure these commands **repeatedly** for all 10 projects.
What about adding a possibility to configure these commands from Workbench's tab globally (in workbench settings) and per-project (by right-clicking on project header, for example, and selecting "Set build commands for project...")?
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