I am working on a CScart project with multiple languages. I noticed that when i change the layout for English, the change doesnt reflect on other language layouts. Is there a way to do this as i have multiple languages and multiple changes to be made
In case you havent defined each language as a seperate storefront, you can just click the checkbox in the block editor to 'apply' to all languages. You could also create static blocks (/templates/bocks/static_templates/*) with language variables and add them in the layout.
The last option would be to export and import the layout using the provided XML import / export tool.
Kind regards,
Related
I have a project with several classes which partly share functions while at other times the functions are different in code, but use the same name.
When hovering over a function name, Sublime highlights every file and line where that definition is found.
In my opinion it would be better if it actually included which class the different highlights belong to.
Is it possible to edit this in some way ?
Assume systems.js contains 4 different classes (1 base, 3 children). I would like to append or prepend the shown strings by the class definition (fetchable via prototype).
The hover popup mentioned in your question is powered by Sublime's internal symbol index, which is created in combination with the syntax definition that's used to syntax highlight files that you're editing. The Sublime syntax system is fairly context free; it parses the structure of the code but it doesn't contain any real structural information about it.
So for example it can determine that getShots is a function or method because of the syntax that was used to define it, but it doesn't know what class it came from.
The code for the hover popup is available in Default/symbol.py (you can use PackageResourceViewer to examine it) and associates symbols under the cursor with other places that it's seen symbols with that name in other files in the project; it literally only knows the information that you see in the popup; places where things by that name are defined and places where things of that name are referenced.
So in one sense, the answer to your question is No; core sublime can't do that because it doesn't have enough code intelligence to be able to figure that sort of thing out; this is exacerbated by dynamic languages like JavaScript where things can theoretically change at runtime as well.
The primary reason for that is because Sublime is extensible enough to support literally every programming language instead of just focusing on one or two (as e.g. PhpStorm does), so it doesn't have the core code to determine the information required.
All that said, since Sublime is indeed extremely extensible, it's possible that external code that does specialize on a language could be leveraged by a package in order to provide the appropriate information.
Two examples of that are SublimeCodeIntel and LSP for example. I don't use either of them myself, so I don't know for sure how good a fit they might be in your workflow.
I highly recommend you shift to Visual Studio Code majorly because sublime is an editor whereas vs code is an IDE. Also, it has very great extension support for all languages. I would recommend you to use jshint which the most popular plugin for js code available for almost all popular editors and IDEs. But still if you want to go with Sublime I suggest you following plugins:
https://www.sitepoint.com/essential-sublime-text-javascript-plugins/
I have a slight problem here and a doubt. I have created a page which has three components added in three different placeholders. This page was created for English version. I need this page and the components to get added in German version of the page as well.
I read a few articles that illustrate the use of layout deltas and "Final layout" feature of Sitecore 8 but got a little confused over this matter.
Article1
Also, I have checked the __Renderings setting in /sitecore/templates/System/Templates/Sections/Layout and the Shared field is checked. Still the layout is not shared.
Am i missing any settings ? Do I need to every time create both versions i.e. repeat the layout steps for German versions as well ?
All suggestions welcomed.
If you are using Sitecore 8.0 and adding the component via the Experience Editor then you will need to add the components to each language variation of the Item, i.e. once for English and once for German. This is because the components are stored against the Final Layout field when added through the Experience Editor and the field is language specific.
The only option you have is to add the components to the Shared Layout manually by selecting the Presentation > Details from the tabs.
If you need to add the same components to all language variations at the same time then I suggest you upgrade to Sitecore 8.1 which will enable you to do that via Edit all versions option in the ribbon:
Edit: As of Sitecore 8.1 update-1, the Shared Layout can be edited using the "Layout Switcher" under the Presentation tab:
How to highlight variables in sublime text 3? like in netbeans
Your question is not very clear, but here are some options. First, if you're just trying to get variables highlighted differently, you'll need a color scheme with more options than the default Monokai. There are many available on Package Control, but one in particular that I know will work (since I'm its author) is Neon:
You can use the excellent tmTheme Editor to see how this or hundreds of other themes will look (sort of) in different languages. (I say "sort of" because the highlighting engine used on the website is different than the one in Sublime, so there will be some differences. Overall it's pretty good, though.)
On the other hand, if you're trying to highlight all the instances of the $page variable, you'll have to do two things. First, double-click on $page to select it. Then, select Find -> Quick Find All (or use its keyboard shortcut) to select all the instances of $page in the document:
The gutter icons and colored underlines are from the BracketHighlighter plugin
Unfortunately, this is the only way to get this to work when using PHP and other languages like JavaScript that denote variables with a $ or other symbol. If we were to use Python, for example, you could just double-click on page and it would look like so:
As you can see, all the other instances of page have boxes around them. This behavior is hard-coded into Sublime, so while it can be turned on and off, it can't be modified or told to recognize other characters in any way.
Good luck!
I can't seem to figure out how to change the menu color or add a background to the menu bar in Gantry 4 for Joomla. Tired of the gray or dark gray default.
I could change the font and selection through the .less file but not the menu itself.
The documentation on the Gantry website is too general.
Thank You in advance.
Also check: menu-light.less & menu-dark.less in the less\ directory.
The folks at RocketTheme don't recommend editing the compiled CSS (but it works great as #Adriana pointed out).
Hi Gantry framework for joomla as you probably notice uses Less to really understand how to change things on the template you first have to learn how less works even that Gantry compiles the less files for you. Less it is fantastic so it worth it. Basically you use a code to define css in a clever way much more economic and then you compile this into more efficient css files
If you change the compiled files as our friends are saying here make not sense at all because as soon you compile again (and you will) this files will be override and all your work lose.
I will give you the direction and you will see that it is not that difficult as look.
1- check the menu you had selected on your Gantry template under Templates Manager - Style - menu style.
2- on your less folder you will see a less file for each of the menu styles with the main variables
for example menu-dark.less try to make sense of the variables and the colors and change them to see what is what.
3- on the same folder you have menu.less and there is where the magic is done using the variables from the previous file. You will see that for example define first level of menu you will have something like:
&.l1 {
> li.active {
background: #menuActiveBack;
So that menuActiveBack variable will be the background value of the active li of the level 1.
4- the last part will be the menu-hovers.less that i thinks it is over complicate things because it is not a need to have a different file to do the hovers but there it is.
You can control CSS compression, Compile Wait Time and Debug Header, as well as manually clear the cache with the Clear Cache button at Extensions → Template Manager → gantry → Advanced → Less Compiler.
more info at: ganty less documentation
Hope it helps to start with....
Happy coding,
Eduardo
it took me a while maybe half an hour to go through the "menu" css file in the "css-compiled" folder.
You can find all the css to alter the background and colors of Gantry's default menu.. I'm using Gantry v4 also.
Go here:
Joomla>templates>gantry>css-compiled>menu-675c76.....
Please view my image to see my results:
http://dream2unite.com/images/misc/GANTRY-MENU-675c76.png
Use FireBug or similar to find the default CSS styling.
Create a file /templates/gantry/css/gantry-custom.css and add your own CSS to override the default CSS.
This is a better method than editing compiled or other template less or css files which can be overwritten during compilation or when the template is updated.
I am just getting into the WMD editor varieties out there :) Of all of them I like MarkEdit because of the ability to modify the menu items quite easily, but it doesn't do a couple of things that I really like in a couple of forks, for example, http://github.com/openlibrary/wmd.
Ideally my perfect WMD editor would:
create list items automatically on pressing return when in a list block (not implemented in MarkEdit)
allow the removal of menu items (implemented in MarkEdit)
the cheat of making a newline without the need for two spaces (implemented in MarkEdit)
As point 1. and 2. are both quite important to me, but I imagine 1. is harder to implement, I may have to use the forks such as the openlibrary-wmd rather than my preferred choice of MarkEdit.
How can I modify the menu buttons in a fork like openlibrary-wmd? The configuration function no longer seems to work as described for the original.
I recently used the markitup editor and found the skin implementation pretty useful. Each skin has its own images and styles which you can easily override if you need to. The editor is also jQuery-driven, which is nice if you're used to that syntax. Check it out