I've never seen this behavior before. It is (apparently?) pretty specific.
It doesn't seem right to me.
I was editing an .HTML file, and I had a line with a URL on it, I was at the end of the line,
and I pressed the TAB key to tab over (I was making a columnar table of URLs),
and it changed the line:
from: bdt.com
to: <bdt class="com"></bdt>
That is an error or bug to me.
Whatever it is, I don't want it to do that and I don't think it should.
If I press SPACE first, then it doesn't do it, it just SPACE-TABS over.
TAB key bug?
TAB key bug?
RJTE version 16.21 (Actual) - 64-bit
Win 10 Pro 64-bit 8 GB RAM Intel Core i7-6700 3.40 GHz SCSI Hard Drive 1 TB
Note: The signature is dynamic, not static,
so it may not show the correct version above
that was in use at the time of the post.
Win 10 Pro 64-bit 8 GB RAM Intel Core i7-6700 3.40 GHz SCSI Hard Drive 1 TB
Note: The signature is dynamic, not static,
so it may not show the correct version above
that was in use at the time of the post.
Re: TAB key bug?
This is Emmet in action, and you have tab defined as a trigger key (it is default setting, I guess). Go to Format > Abbreviations > Allow Trigger Keys and uncheck tab.
Alium tibi quaere fratrem; hic, quem tuum putas, meus est. Titus Flāvius Caesar Vespasiānus Augustus
Re: TAB key bug?
Thanks.
It was enabled.
I don't know what that stuff is, though.
It was enabled.
I don't know what that stuff is, though.
RJTE version 16.21 (Actual) - 64-bit
Win 10 Pro 64-bit 8 GB RAM Intel Core i7-6700 3.40 GHz SCSI Hard Drive 1 TB
Note: The signature is dynamic, not static,
so it may not show the correct version above
that was in use at the time of the post.
Win 10 Pro 64-bit 8 GB RAM Intel Core i7-6700 3.40 GHz SCSI Hard Drive 1 TB
Note: The signature is dynamic, not static,
so it may not show the correct version above
that was in use at the time of the post.
Re: TAB key bug?
Quick way of expanding snippets into HTML code, cf. https://docs.emmet.io/ (see the demo there for a quick introduction).
Alium tibi quaere fratrem; hic, quem tuum putas, meus est. Titus Flāvius Caesar Vespasiānus Augustus