that's a long winded way of saying 'use the plumber' On Tue, Aug 17, 2021, 23:54 sirjofri wrote: > Hello Ben, > > 17.08.2021 22:22:09 Ben Hancock : > > I've just recently started using the acme editor and am really enjoying > > it, and trying to get the hang of the "acme way" of doing things. One > > bit of functionality that I'm familiar with from other editors is the > > ability to easily look up a function or symbol definition within a > > codebase. In Emacs and vi, this is done by generating tags files (etags > > or ctags), which those editors can parse and allow you to easily jump > > to a definition of the symbol under the point/cursor. > > The original developers of Plan 9 software were people who made simple > things even simpler so they can understand them. Imagine your codebase is > so small that you can know many symbols and have other symbols open or at > least know where to look. Using g(rep) in the parent directory of your > project and your brain should be enough. If it isn't your project might > be too complex/large. > > (That's different when reading other code or revisiting code after a long > time, but then you are supposed to read it again so you can understand it > anyway.) > > > What's the preferred method or workflow for achieving this in acme? I > > have tried passing a selected symbol to 'g -n' in the window's tag, > > using the Mouse-2 + Mouse-1 chord. That gets me part of the way there > > but isn't effective if the file where the symbol is defined happens to > > be in another directory. I feel like I'm missing something. > > I doubt you are missing something. People used to use text editor since > there were no IDEs, and keep in mind that the core of unix was written > with ed, maybe even on teletypes. It's like writing code on paper, and it > works. > > My advise is, read and produce good clean code. If you need syntax > highlighting and fancy IDE stuff your codebase is probably too large. > With more training you can work with larger codebases, but still they to > keep it simple and small. If you really need to work with extremely > complex codebases you likely won't find success using plan9 at all. > > Many plan9 tools are one C file only. In acme you can jump between > selected text by right clicking it, which works very well in these cases. > Right clicking included files opens them and you can search there. These > are basically the tools you have. > > I'm personally very happy reading man pages and searching the plan 9 > source with g(rep) and plumbing the results. > > I hope this helps. > > Oh, and you can always write your own tools and call them using > middle-click in acme. You could write an rc-script that cd..s to your > project home directory (if it's a git repo, the one containing .git) and > invokes g, for example. > > sirjofri ------------------------------------------ 9fans: 9fans Permalink: https://9fans.topicbox.com/groups/9fans/Tf8ceac12df9da674-M8b0bad52403f628bb89eebec Delivery options: https://9fans.topicbox.com/groups/9fans/subscription