topbanner_forum
  *

avatar image

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
  • Thursday November 13, 2025, 1:15 am
  • Proudly celebrating 15+ years online.
  • Donate now to become a lifetime supporting member of the site and get a non-expiring license key for all of our programs.
  • donate

Recent Posts

Pages: prev1 ... 56 57 58 59 60 [61] 62 63 64 65 66 ... 121next
1501
General Software Discussion / Re: Advice on a [learning] JavaScript IDE?
« Last post by Edvard on March 30, 2011, 12:17 PM »
Well, if you're looking for something that helps you type the stuff out as you go, with code hints and colorized text, etc. then SciTe should fit the bill:
http://www.scintilla.org/SciTE.html
It's got a JavaScript lexer, lots of autocomplete options, and best of all it's free (both ways).
Yes, it's a code editor, not a full IDE, but might be worth a look anyways.

EDIT:
Also, this is the first Google result for "Javascript IDE":
http://www.aptana.com/
Looks rather nice...

And NetBeans does javascript:
http://netbeans.org/features/javascript/

Or how about EditRocket:
http://editrocket.com/

P.S. I know nothing of Javascript, so any of my suggestions is likely to come from the "Oooh, look... Shiny!" camp, with the exception of SciTe.
That one I have actually used for AutoHotKey and Bash scripts, and it works well.
1502
Living Room / Re: [Linux] Illustration and 2D animation Software
« Last post by Edvard on March 23, 2011, 09:14 PM »
For illustration, Inkscape and Gimp do very well in my book, I've seen some AMAZING things done with them; but I'm also not a professional trying to make a living, so caveat emptor.

For 2D animation, I'm afraid Synfig, Ktoon or Pencil is all you've got for now.
Search around on YouTube for Synfig-created animations for an idea of what it can do.
I agree it's got quite the learning curve, but otherwise it's quite capable.
1503
General Software Discussion / Re: Instantly Increasing Password Strength
« Last post by Edvard on March 23, 2011, 01:26 PM »
I use "Keypass" to store my passwords. It also offers to create random passwords with a single click.

What I really hate is that many websites limits the maximum password length.

Oooh, yeah I hate that.
OR even worse, when they won't accept special characters... like MY BANK!!

I have many of my passwords as a pattern consisting of the first few letters of the name of the website interspersed with numbers and characters chosen by their relative position on the keyboard.
Security (yes I know, that's relative) and memorability FTW.

The only problem with that is, if I ever find myself on a Dvorak keyboard, I'm screwed.  :-[
1504
General Software Discussion / Re: What's your music player of choice?
« Last post by Edvard on March 23, 2011, 01:14 PM »
Banshee was very delicate with external programs touching media files

That is one of the things I don't want to have in a music manager (or player) - the imposition on the media file structure.

I have noticed many tools want to "import" your files into their own structure. Especially on linux

Which ones on Linux?
I haven't noticed it on Linux any more than Windows, less so in fact.
Or maybe I'm also very turned off by media players that want to play librarian and so I pre-emptively steer clear and thus haven't encountered such.

My media needs are very simple; open this, play that, thank you very much, goodbye til next time.
In that respect, VLC has never done me wrong.
I mourn the loss of Shoutcast access, but I fully understand the reasons why.
No worries, I saved my favorite .pls files long ago and they still play.
1505
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 4 RC in 64 bit for Linux
« Last post by Edvard on March 22, 2011, 09:59 PM »
I can see your point, but habit is a ruthless master...  :'(

Now, if I can only figure out why 64-bit Flash isn't working with this version.  :huh:
1506
Living Room / Re: My Movie Fantasy
« Last post by Edvard on March 22, 2011, 08:59 PM »
;D ;D ;D

@Edvard - Serves ya right for opening a fish & chips takeaway right across the street from The Esoteric Order of Dagon's meeting hall.  :tellme:

Iä! Cthulhu fhtagn!  :Thmbsup:

Well, we were here first; they had to move when they opened up a Waldorf school next door to their old place...

Third graders... *shudders*
 ;D
1507
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 4 RC in 64 bit for Linux
« Last post by Edvard on March 22, 2011, 10:50 AM »
So far, it looks ok.
None of my extensions work, but that's to be expected.
Strange to have the tabs on top of the nav bar, but that's easily fixed in the "view" menu.

Cool.
Can't wait for the final.
1508
Living Room / Re: My Movie Fantasy
« Last post by Edvard on March 22, 2011, 10:35 AM »
I would love to see a horror film that takes place during a sunny warm day with cute, cuddly critters that everyone in the audience loves, but the critters are out to do bad things.

You could always volunteer to chaperon a third grade class trip and bring your camcorder along.  :)




Oh no... No no no... OH DEAR GOD!! NOOOOOOOOOooooo......
The horror! The MADNESS!!
URgh! ACkkl;k  Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'NAGL FHTAGNN!!
1509
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 4 RC in 64 bit for Linux
« Last post by Edvard on March 20, 2011, 12:19 PM »
Awesome!
Thanks, I'll be trying this out later tonight.
1510
Living Room / Re: KewlAid.net - My Deepening Hatred for Fanboys
« Last post by Edvard on March 20, 2011, 12:03 AM »
Those of us who aren’t programmers have work to do,
That part tells me he's not using Unix/Linux either.
Apparently, you have to be a programmer to run that beast...  :-\



*edvard passes the sarcasm knife to the next poster*
1511
LXDE uses OpenBox as the Window Manager, so you're already halfway there.
Most of what 'makes' LXDE is the different panel/launcher/utility thingummies bundled in.
Not exactly sure, but it sounds like your problem with OpenBox is there's no bar thingy running by default.
ObConf (OpenBox configuration manager GUI) should help get that worked out.

I actually liked LXDE's LxPanel a lot, worked better and more stable than a lot of other lightweight panels.
Incidentally, the Xfce panel plays nice with OpenBox as well.

Mint is based on Ubuntu, don't know if you'll get any performance increase but I've heard some reports that Mint solves some hardware problems that Ubuntu still has.
1512
Living Room / Re: When you make your 100'th Post
« Last post by Edvard on March 17, 2011, 01:27 PM »
Aha! You caught me before the edit!
Call me red-handed...
1513
General Software Discussion / Re: Lyx is the answer
« Last post by Edvard on March 17, 2011, 01:21 PM »
This here says Latexit can export EPS:
http://pierre.chacha...ation/latexit_en.php

Besides, it's freeware, so it's practically painless to give it a shot.
1514
Very sorry to hear your difficulty in getting this thing up and running.
Believe me, I understand how frustrating Linux can sometimes be, but when it does go...  8)

I didn't know what sort of resource monitor Debian had, so I didn't check.
All Linux versions have a command-line utility called 'top' that gives you running stats.
'htop' is even better, but it's not installed by default on most distros.
Otherwise, each Desktop Environment will have it's own graphical reource monitor.
On Xfce, it's simply "xfce4-taskmanager" (not always installed by default).
Gnome has "System Monitor" and KDE has "KSysGuard".

Could this be because I told both of them to use the same partition for Swap?
Nope, a swap is a swap.
Nothing should be hanging out in there to muck with the other's.
What desktop version of PCLinuxOS are you trying?
KDE? Gnome? Xfce?
If it's Xfce, just hit Alt+F2 and type in: xfce4-panel
The others, I dunno.

Regarding the PCLOS repository bug:
http://www.pclinuxos...p/topic,87377.0.html

For Xubuntu, I don't know what is causing that.
Sometimes an install just goes south when first installed.
Sometimes re-burning the install CD at a slower speed and re-installing will fix it, sometimes a second attempt at installing will spiff it up, sometimes nothing helps.
That said, I'm not even sure Xubuntu is as lightweight as some promise; it's still Ubuntu under the hood, after all.
I'd go with the Debian Xfce live disk if you want to see Xfce fly.
This might help as well:
http://wiki.debian.o...ebianOn/MSI/WindU100

Looks like the Slitaz website is back up:
http://slitaz.org
I had a pleasant time with it on an older laptop a friend gave me before the power supply died; I can give it a solid recommendation.
1515
Living Room / Re: When you make your 100'th Post
« Last post by Edvard on March 17, 2011, 12:45 PM »
w00t!
Caught my own this time!

Screenshot.png
1516
General Software Discussion / Re: Lyx is the answer
« Last post by Edvard on March 17, 2011, 11:50 AM »
Well, if that's all you really need, then I upvote the vector idea... +1

However, if you're not entirely turned off of Latex yet, and since your final layouts are being done on a Mac, may I suggest Latexit:

http://www.apple.com...science/latexit.html
latexit.jpg
(requires MacTex: http://www.tug.org/mactex/)

No bugging around with layouts, configurations, or documents; just work up your math snippet, export and paste.
1517
Living Room / Re: Android tablets to rival iPad
« Last post by Edvard on March 17, 2011, 11:47 AM »
First, the companies need to stop selling tablets packaged with cellular service.  It's not a phone, it never will be.  Phones are phones.  Tablets are tablets.
I agree, to a point; the reason they do that is mainly for internet capability, so it kinda makes sense.
That said, I STRONGLY feel that you should have the freedom of choosing your own provider no matter the device.
...or no provider at all if you wanted, and simply access through WiFi at home, work, or hotspot when it's needed.

Then and ONLY then will I ever seriously consider a pad device.
1518
General Software Discussion / Re: Lyx is the answer
« Last post by Edvard on March 16, 2011, 05:42 PM »
He doesn't like the math rendering.
Obviously InDesign doesn't do formula editingw well.

I was wondering if perhaps there were an InDesign plugin to allow Latex-style formula editing and a quick search came up with this:
MathMagic Pro for InDesign
http://www.mathmagic.../product/prowin.html

Holy crow it's 500 bucks!!  :o
NVM...

Listen, Eóin is right when he said Latex was primarily invented for folks who write large bodies of documentation, voluminous research papers, etc. where you can't be bothered with things like 'what style did I apply on page 4,215 because I need it for 3 pages out of chapter 172.05' kind of stuff.
In fact it's BRILLIANT for things like that, but it could simply be the wrong tool for what you want and the kind of content you are producing.

In keeping in the spirit of this site, let's think of the problem in Programmer's terms.
These are admittedly not exactly accurate, but just for illustration's sake:

Your writing = code.
Latex = compiler.
Classes = language rules (java, C, fortran, etc.).
Lyx = IDE.

Would you agree that code for a simple application is much easier to write than the compiler and language definitions that make it into a nice pretty executable?
Therein lies the rub.

Aram, my advice to you is to either stick with InDesign because you already know it and presumably can work around it's shortcomings, or set aside a day to sit down with Lyx and chew through the tutorials and documentation.
Not opinions, not others' experiences, just you alone coming to terms with what it can and can't do for you and your writing.
I sincerely believe all your questions will be answered there and either you'll come to a blinding realization that it's all painfully true and Lyx will never do or be what you need, or you'll discover some elusive secret that actually proves it to be so much easier than everybody here makes it out to be.

May the force be with you... :P
1519
General Software Discussion / Re: Lyx is the answer
« Last post by Edvard on March 16, 2011, 10:56 AM »
Regarding preview, does this help: http://wiki.lyx.org/LyX/NewInLyX20#toc22
Not really.
What that does is allow you to see a rough rendering of Latex code snippets inline with the text you're working with.
The code still shows, and you still have to render to PDF or DVI to see the final results, which will show the rendered results of the code, and all prettified with your defined formatting.
1520
General Software Discussion / Re: Lyx is the answer
« Last post by Edvard on March 16, 2011, 10:55 AM »
Edvard, I'd like to discuss the details of your issue here:
But when a few very minor things didn't turn out exactly to my liking, I spent a LOT of time tweaking a Class and after 4 or 5 hours it still wasn't coming out exactly right
These are my questions:
1) What was it exactly that you were trying to do?
2) When you say tweaking, what were you tweaking. (the more specific the better.  An xml file?  A settings dialog?)
It's been quite a while since I used Lyx, pardon the rust.
What I was trying to do was spiff up a plain text resume.
Like you, I had gotten tired of styles dialogs and thought Lyx could help me by doing the magical formatting part and I would just tell it what and where.

First, Classes.
A Class is not actually a style like you know them from other WP software, it's like a collection of styles that will get applied to certain parts of your document based on what you tell it to do from within the document itself.
Almost everything about a Class can be defined in the 'Document -> Settings' dialog.
I don't know where they are in Windows, but the files that define Classes have the extension ".layout".
Do a search for them.
Copy one to your Documents folder and use it by selecting 'Document Class -> Local Layout' in the dialog and point it to your local copy.

Where I ran into trouble was defining what parts of my resume would inherit what style element; kinda like trying to get HTML to look nice.
Is it a Header or Body text? Which Header size? That kind of stuff, but in Latex terms.
So then I'd get the elements straightened out and it was hanging 2 sentences on a third page or something so I thought I'd make all the fonts smaller.
Uh-oh, my address got smooshed; better define that part differently...
I can't remember everything, but that's the gist.
I don't think I'd have more than 10 styles I'd use.  It can't be that hard to create 10 styles from scratch, could it?  Let's say it takes me 40 hours.  that's ok.  I'm fine with that.  What I don't want to do is after 40 hours, find out that it's really going to take me 100 more hours to figure this out, and then I just go back to Indesign.  i suppose I should just start playing with it.  I just can't see too many things that need to be tweaked.  Font, font size, font styles (italic, bold), line spacing (top, bottom), indentation, bullet lists, numbered lists.  This is all basic stuff.  Then I'd add some page decorations, like borders, page breaks, horizontal lines.  Is lyx going to fight me in trying to do these things?
No, Lyx will not fight you per se, it simply does things automatically according to the set of rules defined in the Class.
Sometimes those rules do something unexpected (especially when you don't know them well), and sometimes you'd like to break a rule here or there, which is where you get into fights.

Here's where I try to cut it short and say RTFM (Read The Free Manual).
As in, go through the Help menu; the Tutorial, Users Guide, Customization, etc.
Read ALL of it; it's very thorough and informative.
Really, it'll help A LOT.

Well, here's my first problem with Lyx:
No print preview of any kind.
I'd like to be able to preview what my document is going to look like without having to print to pdf, which takes a while.  I'd like to be able to make some changes, check the changes, fine tune the changes, check it again, etc.  I know, I know, "Lyx doesn't want you worrying about that." Whatever.  I need to see a preview!  It's 2011.
That's why I said start with an example document that was small.
That way it won't take so long to generate a document for you to preview.
If your Windows Lyx has DVI preview, use that; it's faster than PDF, and is just as accurate.
In my opinon, the biggest reason Lyx doesn't have a "live" preview is that the formatted & typeset product is SO good that a 'live' approximation just won't do it justice and is actually likely to mislead you as to final appearances.
Really. It's that good.
I mean, even MS Word prints out differently then how you see it on the screen.
Which is why we keep coming back to the same point; you do the writing, let Lyx do the formatting.
That is it's destiny

I think I'm sticking with indesign.  I got a little excited yesterday.
Oh.
OK.
NVM.
 :P
1521
General Software Discussion / Re: Lyx is the answer
« Last post by Edvard on March 16, 2011, 07:13 AM »
Superboy, all we're saying is that Lyx (Latex) is VERY powerful for formatting text (you already know that), and as Spider-Man once said oh so long ago, "with great power comes great responsibility".
We'd like to spare you that pain, but since you've stated many times how nit-picky you are, I'm thinking it's inevitable you'll be wanting to get your hands dirty.
IMHO, nothing wrong with using a GUI, nothing wrong with being picky; Latex CAN be made to do your bidding, it just might take a bit of work.

My advice would be to write an example document, say 5-10 pages long, load it into Lyx and spit out some PDF's, applying appropriate-sounding Classes for each one.
Figure which one is closest to how you want it, make a copy and tweak it, checking the output after each adjustment until you get it just right.
Don't be surprised if this process takes a good chunk of time, but once you get it set up, you can write to your heart's content and spit out perfectly formatted documents until the cows come home.

I only warned you because I did this myself a short while ago, trying to format a resume from a plain text file into a pretty document.
I have to say it actually worked VERY well, and the default 'Curriculum Vitae' formatting was very impressive.
I tried out a few different classes and every one had nice touches and distinct advantages that obviously would work very well for other types of documents.
But when a few very minor things didn't turn out exactly to my liking, I spent a LOT of time tweaking a Class and after 4 or 5 hours it still wasn't coming out exactly right (probably due more to my inexperience than anything), so I gave up and went back to the CV class I had tried in the first place.

Caveat Utilitor...
1522
General Software Discussion / Re: Lyx is the answer
« Last post by Edvard on March 15, 2011, 09:21 PM »
I totally understand.
All I'm saying is, concentrate on your writing, because that's the point; you'll be telling Lyx what to do as you go along, and it will obey.
The Pre-set Classes available are pretty good, just roll with them for now, there might even be one that's perfect out of the box.
Later, you can open one up and make minor adjustments here and there, and IME that process can get nuts pretty damn quick.
1523
General Software Discussion / Re: Lyx is the answer
« Last post by Edvard on March 15, 2011, 06:39 PM »
Lyx is great for what it says it's for, which may be exactly what you're looking for.
If you can get the concept of WYSIWYM, you're more than halfway there.

The only instability I've discovered so far is when that one section looks almost right, and I just KNOW I can fix it in the Class file...  

Long story short
Save yourself from the get-go by picking a Class that looks most like what you envision your end-product to be, and work with it.
Save tweaking up your own for when you have more experience and a few hours to waste :P

1524
No, I knew what you were referring to, I just thought you had some news that the next gen iPad was to be made out of bioplastic and corn syrup.

Cheese flavored, if you please...
1525
Ooh... forgot about #!

It was touted as the forthcoming OS of choice for a Linux "pad" computer.
Remember the CrunchPad?
Sad story, but the OS is none too shabby.
Pages: prev1 ... 56 57 58 59 60 [61] 62 63 64 65 66 ... 121next