![lighttable highlight line lighttable highlight line](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/9a/b4/86/9ab486701202dfe8099fcc5fc722c01a.jpg)
- LIGHTTABLE HIGHLIGHT LINE INSTALL
- LIGHTTABLE HIGHLIGHT LINE FULL
- LIGHTTABLE HIGHLIGHT LINE ANDROID
- LIGHTTABLE HIGHLIGHT LINE CODE
To uninstall Light Table installed via Ubuntu Make, use the command below: umake -r ide lighttable
LIGHTTABLE HIGHLIGHT LINE INSTALL
Once you have Ubuntu Make installed, use the commands below to install Light Table: umake ide lighttable sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-desktop/ubuntu-make Use the commands below to install the latest version of Ubuntu Make. I recommend using the official PPA to install the latest version of Ubuntu Make instead of directly installing it from Ubuntu repositories (they contain older version).
LIGHTTABLE HIGHLIGHT LINE ANDROID
Ubuntu also provides a command line tool, Ubuntu Make, for developers to easily install various programming tools such as IntelliJ IDEA, Android Studio, Ubuntu SDK etc. Method 2: Install Light Table in Ubuntu using Ubuntu Make Sudo add-apt-repository -remove ppa:dr-akulavich/lighttable To uninstall Light Table installed via the above PPA, use the commands below: sudo apt-get remove lighttable-installer Once installed, you can look for Light Table in Unity Dash and run it. Sudo apt-get install lighttable-installer Open a terminal and use the following commands: sudo add-apt-repository ppa:dr-akulavich/lighttable PPA is available for Ubuntu 16.04, Ubuntu 15.10 and Ubuntu 14.04. In addition to that, this PPA will also work in other Linux distributions based on Ubuntu such as Linux Mint and elementary OS. The benefit of using the PPA is that you avoid doing all these extra efforts to make it work like a normal application. you don’t need to worry about the future updates because Light Table notifies you if there are any new updates available. This unofficial PPA by Anton Yakutovich downloads the latest build of Light Table and installs it. Method 1: Install Light Table in Ubuntu using PPA Use Ubuntu Make command line tool (an Ubuntu exclusive way).Use an unofficial PPA (works for all Ubuntu based Linux distributions).
![lighttable highlight line lighttable highlight line](https://www.wrightsplastics.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/Acrylic-Nest-of-Tables-Glass-Effect-Premium-1080x675.jpg)
LIGHTTABLE HIGHLIGHT LINE FULL
To recreate the full width, I had to set an extremely large width and the hide the overflow.
LIGHTTABLE HIGHLIGHT LINE CODE
But since it also needs to be behind the actual lines of code I position: absoluted it and lost the ability to do go with width: 100%. The trick is to use the :before pseudo-element to create a rectangle and make it span the whole line.
![lighttable highlight line lighttable highlight line](https://i5.walmartimages.com/asr/d06adba7-96a3-4e44-a5e4-dd71feecf75e_1.1c9821064f9d0cfd240ea9f0110695ef.jpeg)
Now there’s no such thing as “current line” in CodeMirror, you basicaly have a div per line of code and a div representing the caret but outside of the lines. CodeMirror-cursor is the caret element, the reste above are individual lines of code The line on which the caret is currently positionned stands out from the rest with its light background so it’s easy to know where you are in your code when you come back to the code editor.
![lighttable highlight line lighttable highlight line](https://sc01.alicdn.com/kf/H240464ab801a4baa93941e39a91067faa/232933494/H240464ab801a4baa93941e39a91067faa.jpg)
Update: Miguel Castillo was kind enough to point me an option in the Brackets menu that makes it dead simple to higghlight the current line, so the code below isn’t actually used anymore. It’s not only makes code good looking and very readable, it also comes with some handy-dandy stuff that I believe no other CodeMirror theme has so far - because I had to hack them together. Brackets runs on CodeMirror, so I wrote a new theme for it which basicaly mimics LightTable. It comes with lots of great features, but at the end of the day I missed the LightTable theme which made code surprisingly more legible (and beautifull). I ended up adopting Adobe Brackets, which is beta too but stable enough for me. ZendStudio needed to make room for a better suited code editor, so I first gave LightTable a shot and while I’m sure it’s the next generation of IDE and it will be awesome, it’s too much of a beta right now for me. With my recent job change I switched from writting lots of PHP to writting lots of html, css and js.