This RU-vid channel features math, programming, and web development videos!
Hi, my name is Tim Unkert and I am a full stack developer (html, css, javascript / jquery, php, and mysql), developer of numguess.com and lttracy.com and a former math teacher (AP Calculus, Pre-Calculus, Algebra II, Algebra I, Pre-Algebra). I do a lot of different coding tutorials and feature videos on a lot of different text editors / IDEs. I hope these videos help you!
you should probably lead with explaining the feature of emaqs markdown mode. What can it do? What can’t it do? Can you synq the desktop app with your mobile device? Is it free? Is it subscription? How does it compare to other note-taking apps? I quit about 4 minutes in as you were heads down in the app and I had no idea what you were doing. This is more of a tutorial video than an overview of the app. It’s a good tutorial, for sure!
I am following each of your steps. After you did the initial gnome install, it only took a second for yours to load. Mine is taking an awfully long time. Should it be like this?
Hello, @Timothy_Unkert Thanks very much for this video and all the step-by-step guide on it. Quite thorough :D I tried the second method (.deb) and it all seemingly went well until the end, but when I clicked the icon of Brackets, the app opened but was completely blank (all white). My Chromebook is Thinknpad C13 Yoga. Do you have any clues why my Brackets is all white; no menu nor control-buttons displayed?
hey it 's very helpful video, but i wanted to ask you one question i am refreshing the website but i am not getting the text in middle. Can you please help me with.
Great video! A question: how to set a different tabsize per file type? It seems doable just on general ~/.nanorc, namely a fixed size for every file. Cheers in advance.
The best option is clean out your installation, uninstall, do a reboot and start all over again. Ensure you do not have too many running apps. Start with that. @@lukmonsannitat632
@@TimothyUnkert feeling overwhelmed with analysis paralysis.. I've done some Vim,like the tutorial coupled with vim master,some you tube.ive completed codecamp and started J.S., moving now towards versin control with git and working regularly in a text editor.i see the choices,but it's too much-plug in this,plug in that ,them I see plug in managers as like another stand alone thing. I see vs code and the html mark up CC and the fancy stuff,but vim just looks like notepad or worse! I've asked ,well,you can use vim movement in vs code or atom, but that seems like theirs a lot more involved then just downloading a plug in. Why bother with vim , but every I turn the message is the same:learn vim. I really don't want to learn 2 systems of key binders or do I? I want to just concentrate on the code but feel get distracted like I need to spend the next year now just learning text editors! Idk if there's a question In there .maybe just some advice
@@brycecolwell4304 I would just stick with VS Code for now and learn JS (far more important), then worry about VIM later. Where VIM was helpful, for me, as a web developer was when I SSH'd into a server and had to do something. Knowing how to use basic VIM movements for small edits was useful at one of my web development jobs I worked at in the past. I like making videos on VIM because it's cool and an awesome editor but another web developer who I worked with never used it (he used PhpStorm) and had worked 7 years in the industry. FYI, I've left the web dev world behind (for the most part) and moved back into teaching math (and a little web dev as one basic STEM class). VIM can be helpful for some of my math stuff - see ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ibuP_uzdVrI.html (although I could do this with other editors also).
@@brycecolwell4304 I guess what I'm saying is the editor stuff is a cool fun nice to have (and make videos about) but coding is the most important thing to learn.