Too aggressive. Deleted. - jacobolus
It isn't TextMate's fault that it tells Launch Services it is able to handle many more types of files than the other editors on your machine. Send a bug report to Apple if you want TextEdit to pick up more filetypes in its info.plist.To blame TextMate for simply announcing its ability to edit many types of files is absurd.
Tuesday, May 02 2006 @ 03:05 AM PDT
Too dumb to use a 'puter... deleted. - lowellmbox-torrent
Note, too, that you can always select a file, use "Command-I" to show info and then expand the "Open with:" option to select the application to open that file... After changing the default app, you can, if you like, click on the button that says "use to open all files like this". I used to do that with PDF files (using just Acrobat Reader) till Preview improved enough to be a typically-better, Spotlight-integrated alternative... there's almost always a way to fix such behaviors to suit your preferences.If you don't want to change the global preference, but just want to be able to open a file in another app, simply right-clicking (option-clicking) will give you the option to select another appropriate application. You can also just drag the file to the icon of the application (in the dock or a finder window.)
Friday, May 12 2006 @ 05:35 AM PDT
Too aggressive. Deleted. - wgscott
I have the same experience. Make a text file and give it a non-canonical suffix. If TextMate is present, it will take over. If TextMate is absent, you get prompted by the OS to choose an application that you believe is appropriate.Monday, June 05 2006 @ 08:08 PM PDT
- Too aggressive. Deleted. - jacobolus | Thursday, September 21 2006 @ 11:18 AM PDT
- Too aggressive. Deleted. - wgscott | Saturday, February 10 2007 @ 03:41 PM PST
Too aggressive. Deleted. - LarryP
This is a legitimate complaint. It's only annoying that TextMate opens every document that you double-click on, because that can -- with effort -- be avoided. But it also opens documents which are downloaded which it has no business opening. No other application does this. It is not a system problem. It is a problem with TextMate, and very annoying. I want my system to work the way I ask it to, not the way TextMate thinks it should. Without TextMate, no problem; with TextMate, problem.Saturday, October 06 2007 @ 04:26 PM PDT
Wrong! - textmate
It declares which file types it can handle.It is then the OS which assigns a default applications to the document types for which the user hasn’t made an explicit choice.
Generally though, I think the OS is smart enough to only use the document types from the new application, which the user did not already have an application for. But I don’t know exactly how it works, and it is outside my control.
So if the behavior is a problem, the proper place to complain would be to Apple, not giving me one star ratings on version tracker. But whatever floats your boat…
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Sunday, April 16 2006 @ 09:49 PM PDT