I'm afraid this might be more related to GTK than Geany itself, but still...
Most of the computers I use have a 1366x768 screen resolution, and Geany is perfectly usable in them. But one of then has a FullHD screen in which text is too small, so I have set the Windows font size to 150%. Most applications render properly, and also do other editors such as Notepad++, or IDEs such as Visual Studio, but Geany results far less readable than in the other computers, which have 1366x768 and 100% font size.
I'm using Geany 1.31 and Windows 10 (in all the computers).
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When using dark color schemes the pair tag highlighting completely obscures tag attributes. It will be nice if the highlight color and opacity is configurable through configuration file and/or some simple UI (e.g. similar to git-changebar plugin).
![pair_tag_highlight](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/421991/23891197/d8cb0e6e-089d-11e7-9d3a-7e9cfc8cea39.png)
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The version of geany on xubuntu 18.04 is 1.32-2. 18.04 no longer has the gksu package. So, configuring a custom action such as gksu geany %f does not work. gksu's replacement is pkexec. I use geany extensively and it does not come with a policy file. I can create one but would like the standard product to have one.
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I would love it if the startup path would have the option of it being the last used directory. If I am writing a new file which I want to save into a directory several levels down in the directory tree, and I last used that directory, it would be nice if save would offer that directory first.
There are times when I spelunk down the directory tree, and if I am writing a new file for that directory, I do not want to have to spelunk down to that directory again. I think my deepest is 9 down. So when opening or saving files, I would like to open or save to the last used directory.
Also, how do I remove recent files from the list to the left? I do not want that as the default if no directory is entered into Startup path. It is annoying.
Please?
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This may apply to other versions as well, but I'm using Sierra.
The tabbed dialog boxes don't read the cursor position correctly. It's basically "move until the thing you want to click acts like you're hovering". Pulling the tab out as a separate window resolves the issue. The main editor doesn't have this issue.
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I'm a general long term Scite user (_no expert though_).
OS: **Linux!** (Mint) ... (_with very limited Linux skills_)
Geany looks nice, attractive and useful, but the way the Python(interpreter) output is displayed (terminal) is stopping me from actually using it. I guess I'm just to used to the Scite's output (display and feature wise).
1) Are there any option available that I could try to get the Python output in a more Scite-output-pane look?
2) Just in case. Might it even be possible, to 'somehow' use Scite itself for displaying the output?
(_both automatically, copy and pasting is of course out_)
(With a bit of tinkering I already made Geany to show Python code like its displayed in Scite, to make it more like I'm used to (to lessen the color culture shock so to speak (*joke*))
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I've updated the filetype-defintions for python via the Tools->Configuration Files->Filetype Configuration->Scripting Languages->fileytypes.python and added
> [indentation]
> width=4
> type=0
which should be also the default. But even after restarting Geany when opening a Python-file default indent is done via \t. (1.30.1 on 10.11.6)
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Not sure whether there might be issues with dependencies, but it would be really awesome if the bundle would contain the geniuspaste plugin.
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