Ace editor Processing mode? - processing

I uploaded a processing file to github. I want to show the code on my website. So I implement ACE editor in my site and ajaxed my proecessing code to the ace editor. But there is a problem.
I want the code showed on my look as the code show in Processing IDE. But Ace editor support java language but no mode for processing. How can I solve this problem ? I could not find any package for Ace processing mode.

http://hello.processing.org/editor/ uses Ace, and it have a mode for processing see http://hello.processing.org/js/vendor/ace/mode-processing.js

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Preview of math formulars in ASCiiDoc (VS Code)

I am using VS Code to write a document in ASCiiDoc. Part of this document are math formulas.
My problem is that preview of this formulars does not work. For example: If I write
latexmath:[\alpha(t_i)]
the preview is
(\alpha(t_i)).
In Git intepretation of this works, but not locally in preview. How do I fix this?
This problem was discussed in the following GitHub issues:
https://github.com/asciidoctor/asciidoctor-vscode/issues/165
https://github.com/asciidoctor/asciidoctor-vscode/issues/279
The solution appears to be to change the Asciidoc: Change Preview Security Settings to Disable to allow the remote content for the images to load.

What theme does Runnable Use for their Ace Editor Implementation

It looks as though runnable.com uses ace code editor. What is the purple theme they use?
http://runnable.com/UmGTLn0iIYljAAEu/codemirror-example-change-theme
It appears they are using custom theme runnable_dark. Try running ace.define.modules["ace/theme/runnable_dark"].cssText in devtools to see it's css.

Read Firefox HTML layout engine source code?

I download Firefox latest source code and I want to know the detail of how Firefox layout engine work.
Especially, how block/inline formatting context implemented, how block level and inline level elements layouted.
Can someone give me some advices or links on reading the source code?
update:
I compiled Firefox on Win7 and managed to run it in debug mode and set some breakpoint. But I'm stucked. Where should I put a breakpoint so that I can step through the code which calculate the x,y,w,h of html elements.
Did you try reading this documents:
http://www-archive.mozilla.org/newlayout/doc/,
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Introduction_to_Layout_in_Mozilla and
https://wiki.mozilla.org/Gecko:Home_Page

Integrated Markdown WYSIWYG text editor

In looking for a straightforward WYSIWYG editor for Markdown code, I am not finding a comparible UI to that of CkEditor, TinyMCE, ect.
Specifically, the Markdown "WYSIWYG" editors that are often recommended (such as posts like this ) are not pure WYSIWYG editors in the sense that users either still write raw Markdown ( MarkItUp ) or go to the other extreme of having in-line editing without standard controls ( Hallo ).
I need something in-between.
I'm looking for a Markdown editor that looks and functions like a stripped down CkEditor text box, and that accepts and outputs Markdown. There should be a toolbar with a minimum set of formatting options (B, I, U, lists, ect), and the text entry area should show the converted Markdown, not the raw code. There should be a Source button that will allow users to edit the raw Markdown, but even that is optional. Ex:
I get the reason for Markdown/wiki, ect - the security it offers. I don't mind entering raw code like here at SE, but my users are not geeks and do not find this enjoyable. They don't want to see * * * ___ and spaces mixed in with their text. They are used to "Word" style editing, and are most productive in that environment.
So - is there a truly integrated WYSIWYG editor for Markdown? I'm writing in a PHP, so something that I can invoke with a class would be perfect.
Sept 23, 2015 Update
CKEditor now has a Markdown addon that does this exact thing. The addon project is hosted on github.
Screenshots:
Apr 13, 2015 Update
Someone professing to develop CKEditor says that the appearance of CommonMark is a game changer, and we could possibly see a proper markup interface for CKEditor (read comments for the full story).
Feb 6, 2015 Update
CKEditor now comes with a plugin that outputs (and accepts as input) BBCode.
Demo: http://ckeditor.com/demo#bbcode
SimpleMDE, a newcomer, may be the answer. I've been searching for something just like this for a month now. I'm surprised that this does not show up higher in search results. I had to go through a notice on lepture/editor to find this.
I was researching in this subject the other day and I haven't found any decent WYSIWYG editor with Markdown output. In fact, first you have to have to create a WYSIWG Markdown editor is WYSIWG HTML editor and there are just few of them that are usable on the market.
There's a chance that you'll be able to create dataProcessor for CKEditor that will change HTML editor into Markdown editor. We've got a plugin for BBCode that works like this (check out http://nightly-v4.ckeditor.com/3737/samples/bbcode.html).
All you have to do is implement this interface http://nightly-v4.ckeditor.com/ckeditor_api/#!/api/CKEDITOR.dataProcessor. If you check BBCode plugin's code you'll see some hacks and tricks, because unfortunately current CKEditor's architecture isn't ready (yet) to create such a data processor. However, I believe that if you want to provide only few styling options you should be able to implement Markdown support pretty quickly.
EDIT Sept 23, 2015
CKEditor now has a Markdown addon that does this exact thing. The addon project is hosted on github.
Screenshots:
As posted in my Feb 6, 2015 update, CKEditor now includes plugins that allow BBCode input and output.
A demo is available here: http://ckeditor.com/demo#bbcode
EDIT Apr 13, 2015:
Someone professing to develop CKEditor says that the appearance of CommonMark is a game changer, and we could possibly see a proper markup interface for CKEditor (read comments for the full story).
Pen is a new (active as of 2014) WYSIWYG editor that outputs Markdown.
It's not perfect—I've had issues with pasting HTML there—but it works.
Edit: Sorry! It doesn't output Markdown. Walery Strauch pointed out in the comments that the Markdown formatting signs I saw were actually CSS pseudo element rules:
Still, I'll leave it here as an option since some people upvoted this answer and it may have been of use to somebody.
I implemented a very simple editor that allows the contents of a <textarea> that contains Markdown to be edited in a WYSIWYG fashion.
I used Hallo. I don't think its web site makes it obvious that it is not itself a Markdown WYSIWYG editor but the demo does forge the path to one.
Hallo allows WYSIWYG editing of the HTML inside a <div>. I used javascript to hide any <textarea> blocks that have a specific wysiwyg CSS class, replacing it with a <div> and copying the contents of the <textarea> into the <div>. The copying runs through Showdown which produces HTML from Markdown.
Another Javascript routine reacts every time the <div> contents change. It copies the contents back into the (now hidden) <textarea>. The content is run through to-markdown to convert from HTML to Markdown.
If the <textarea> is a field in a <form>, then the edited Markdown will be sent to the server when that form is submitted.
The inspiration for this comes from the Hallo Markdown Example, specifically the editor.js file. I used that as a basis for my own script along with hallo.js, showdown.js and to-markdown.js.
My script, wysiwyg.js is a derivative of editor.js from the Hallo Markdown Example. Some points to note:
I use this in a Rails application (not that that matters)
It runs on ready and also on page:load, the latter because Rails uses Turbolinks
It runs on ajaxComplete because I use Ajax for form error reports
There are other dependencies: JQueryUI and Rangy (Rails users can avail of the gems jquery-ui-rails and rangy-rails).
Also Font Awesome is used for the tool bar icons. The version of hallo.js used by the demo is out of date (it uses an old version of Font Awesome) - use hallo.js from GitHub instead.
You only need to add CSS class='wysiwyg' to any <textarea> to enable WYSIWYG on it. The <textarea> should conain Markdown formatted text.
I would expect that wysiwyg.js could be easily adapted to use another editor if you don't like Hallo as long as it works on the HTML in a <div>. There are quite a few to choose from but not all are as lightweight as Hallo.
A smilar piece of work that I found is markdown-html-form. It uses the same Showdown and to-markdown.
I am also looking for a markdown editor that is described at the top of this thread
Have you seen "markdown tools": http://md-wysiwyg.sourceforge.net/
Demo: http://md-wysiwyg.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/cgi_wysiwyg_test.py/
That seems pretty close to what we are looking for, it does a reasonable job of taking your WYSIWYG rich text and outputting markdown. However it failed on an encoding exception when I pasted in some rich text from a google doc.
I found two which currently seem to be quite popular, active and free but haven't been mentioned yet.
The first one is Toast UI Editor. It supports both modes (WYSIWYG and raw). It has official react and vuejs wrappers.
The second one is ProseMirror which calls itself "a toolkit for building rich-text editors on the web" and it seems to be very flexible and extensive. It also supports both modes.
I'm pretty sure solid unofficial react / vue / angular wrappers for it can be found as well.

Is there support for XML code hinting / completion in Sublime Text 2?

I am giving Sublime Text 2 a try and I was editing an XML file - that had a DOCTYPE declaration and a DTD - and there seems to be no way to get code hinting / completion when editing the XML document.
I am sure its something simple I am overlooking. I cannot imagine Sublime does not have this kind of functionality, even if provided via a plugin.
Can someone shed some light on this for me?
Sublime Text is first and foremost a text editor.
But, the reason for it's popularity is in large part due to it's extensibility.
Although you could use Sublime's api to create a specific plug-in to do this, Sublime has a few tools that are already helpful in editing xml files and other markup files on a bare install.
Hinting and completions in particular are very easy to add. It shouldn't take a more than few minutes to create a domain specific sublime-completions file for your particular xml.
You can use alt+shift+w to create an xml element, in addition alt+. will close any un-closed xml element.
You may also want to try the Sublime Tag plug-in available through Package Control
Lastly you could also bring this up in the Sublime forums as a plug-in request. There are a lot of helpful folks in the plug-in community.
You can use the 'tag' plugin from Sublime Package Control. It has auto tag closing, linting and other features. The github page for the project is here: https://github.com/SublimeText/Tag
You can install it using Package Control without leaving your Sublime text editor.

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