Bbedit save through interarchy
![bbedit save through interarchy bbedit save through interarchy](https://upload-images.jianshu.io/upload_images/18629788-24f183afd69121cb.jpeg)
I would love Sublime Text to have built in FTP – in the same manner as Coda.
Bbedit save through interarchy update#
If anyone has a better solution for me, I’m all ears… but saying “if you’re editing remotely, you’re doing it wrong” and using that as a basis to not have a feature that 95% of all other IDEs use is a bit narrow minded.Īlthough I’m not gonna use git to store files remotely(not web-server), I wanted to have file history & update files on web-server every time. It’s FAR from an ideal solution, but it was only one that I could figure out that is manageable.īecause of this, lack of good SFTP support is what has stopped me from purchasing sublime text because I love every other aspect of it.
![bbedit save through interarchy bbedit save through interarchy](https://tidbits.com/uploads/2020/10/BBEdit-13.5-rescue-untitled.jpg)
![bbedit save through interarchy bbedit save through interarchy](https://blog.memcu.com/hs-fs/hubfs/Imported_Blog_Media/Login-Screen-300x254.png)
In the end I settled on editing files directly over SFTP and committing gits on the server via remote desktop once I was happy with the results. Everywhere I looked for help, I kept getting the same answer: I spent months trying to find some kind of git workflow working where every time I saved a file in an IDE it pushed it to the server with git so that I could test, and when I was finished commit it to version control. Setting up something complicated like a sql replication system to your local workstation is not only silly, but would be an interesting conversation with your IT staff at work as to why you need to open your SQL ports on your local workstation to the internet. And when working with CMS frameworks like drupal, wordpress, joomla, etc… the database structure of those changes almost everytime there’s a core or module update (which is often.) So just doing the download ONCE and using that for developing against is not an option. I’m not going to pull down a 2gb SQL database as part of a git pull every time I start to develop. It sounds great -on paper- but I’ve never found a good way to actually -use- it because of databases. I understand git, I understand the obvious benefits of code versioning with it, not deploying buggy software to a live server, etc… I get it. I struggle with the answers provided here.