
In addition, Ctrl+D / command+D in Sublime also have two other awesome features which are being able to go back one step when you select by mistake one occurrence too many (using Ctrl+U for "Undo") and even skipping one occurrence and going on to the next (using Ctrl+K for "Kill" ), as described here.

This can be a problem: in my workflow I produce different versions of the same objects that differ only by a couple letters (say, the above objects may refer to CardioVascular Disease and I might want to quickly produce another set of objects where CVD becomes PD, Pulmonary Disease or simply change Tab1, Regression1 into Tab2, Regression2 and so on). Whereas command Quick Add Next would only select the first two: it appears to only recognize text blocks that are bordered by either spaces or dots, but not text blocks that are bordered by anything else, including underscores. all four occurrences of CVD will be selected in the following text block: CVD The main problem for me is the following: Ctrl+D in Sublime recognizes all subsequent occurrences of a text block/piece of text that is currently selected, e.g. Unfortunately, though, it does not reproduce fully the behavior of Ctrl+D (or command+D) in Sublime, that is important for the workflow of many. The command Quick Add Next is really great. Support Syntax Highlighting - Custom color themes of text - Undo & Redo text when edit - Auto save history files open and changes with multi files edit. Features: - Support Multiple languages such as.
SUBLIME TEXT EDIT MULTIPLE LINES FREE
In this mode, history browsing might be impossible, or you could show buttons or enable alternative keyboard shortcuts to browse history.Hi there: I am going to re-open this thread rather than posting a new one. Sublime Text Editor is a free application for text editor for mobile phones. The toggle button could enable "multi-line search mode", which would disable history browsing with the arrow keys, and let the arrow keys work the way they normally do. I had to use the mouse to click on each line so I could edit it. That feature is handy when you're searching for only one line, but it was really annoying in this case. But every time I pressed up or down, the whole search was replaced with the previous or next search text from history. I was just trying to edit each line of a multi-line regex search to add a capturing group to capture leading whitespace.

It could also change the behavior of the up and down arrow keys. The toggle button could do more than just allow resizing the window. This is analogous to how regular expression search has a toggle button to tell people that regex search is possible, rather than relying on people knowing the hotkey Alt+R.

I think Sublime Text needs a toggle button to expose the feature. It is very hard to know that you can resize the panel without looking it up or hearing about it from someone. I had no idea you could resize the panel until I searched for "sublime text multi line find" and found this page.
