Welcome!
This is the community forum for my apps Pythonista and Editorial.
For individual support questions, you can also send an email. If you have a very short question or just want to say hello — I'm @olemoritz on Twitter.
[Example] editor.annotate_line (py3 beta)
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A silly example for editor.annotate_line. It's does a search on the current file and setting an annotation. This case is just the occurrence. Editor has a built in search, but just an example.
import editor, clipboard, console, io def get_file_text(): file_name = editor.get_path() with io.open(file_name, encoding = 'utf-8') as file: return file.read() def find_lines(text, search_text): lst = [] for ln_no, ln in enumerate(text.splitlines()): if search_text in ln: lst.append(ln_no + 1) return lst def mark_lines(lns, s_text): for i, ln in enumerate(lns): editor.annotate_line(ln, text = str(i + 1), style = 'success', expanded= False) if __name__ == '__main__': s_text = console.input_alert('Enter text to search for') if not s_text: exit() file_text = get_file_text() ln_list = find_lines(file_text, s_text) mark_lines(ln_list, s_text)
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Ok, somewhere along the line I missed you can tap the file name to navigate the annotations. But its a great implementation I think
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@phuket2 this is really nice. You had mentioned that to me before but I wasn't sure what you meant. It's cool. I'm more and more looking forward to the next version of pythonista!