In other words, BBEdit maintains a ring of six clipboards which you can rotate left or right, much like Switcher (the original way to change between running applications on the Mac) or Emacs’s Kill Ring. There’s also a Next Clipboard command to cycle in the opposite direction. The sixth time you use Previous Clipboard, you end up back at the most recent clipboard. The difference is that when you Cut or Copy, the clipboard’s previous contents are not lost: you can get them back by using the Previous Clipboard command, and you can do this five times. If you only want to use one clipboard, you don’t need to do anything differently. Unlike Mailsmith, BBEdit does not color text to indicate the levels of quoting.īBEdit now has multiple clipboards, which it preserves across launches. It’s like a quote-savvy version of the Hard Wrap command, so it also supports indenting and reverse indenting, optionally relative to the first line. The Rewrap command reflows quoted text, wrapping all the lines to the same length. You can increase or decrease the level of quoting, or remove all the quotes entirely. Mailsmith’s commands for manipulating quoted e-mail text are now built into BBEdit. Files can contain text in a mix of different scripts, but BBEdit windows are still limited to a single font at a time, so you’ll have to flip back and forth between fonts using the new Font menu. Multi-byte support is pervasive: it works in BBEdit’s text manipulation dialogs as well as with the HTML tools. (Right-to-left scripts such as Arabic are not supported.) It can open and save files in Unicode using the UTF-16 (big-endian or little-endian) and UTF-8 formats. BBEdit now supports multi-byte text in scripts from Japanese to Cyrillic to Ethiopic.
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