Place your mouse cursor over that person's color badge, and click the X that appears.Locate the name of the person you wish to kick out in the Share banner.Click Share at the bottom of the editor to reveal the Share banner.Kicking Someone Out of Your Document (from Coda Help) Only people who are also running Coda or SubEthaEdit on the same local network as you will be shown in the Invite pop-up. Your invitation will appear on the recipient's screen, and that person may choose to accept or ignore your invitation. If the other person accepts, he or she will see your entire document, and be able to make live changes at the same time as you. Choose the desired person's name to invite them. To invite someone to access your document, click Share at the bottom of the editor to reveal the Share banner, then click Invite to see a list of other nearby users. Inviting Someone to your Document (from Coda Help) Click Share again to hide the Share banner and disable sharing for this document.Click Bonjour again to “un-announce” your document from the local network.To announce your document on the local network with Bonjour: At this point, your document is able to receive connections, but is not announced on the local network with Bonjour. To announce your document, click Share at the bottom of the editor to reveal the Share banner. It allows Coda and SubEthaEdit users outside your local network who know your IP address to connect to your document.It makes your document appear in the Bonjour window for SubEthaEdit users on your local network.It makes your document appear in the Shared sidebar for other Coda users on your local network.How Does It Work?Īnnouncing Your Document (from Coda Help)Īnnouncing your document accomplishes three things: Of course, if you were so inclined (and a complete nerd with too much time on your hands) you could still use version control to track changes made with Coda's file-sharing but it seems ridiculous. For those times when the overhead of dedicated Source Control Management (SCM) tools like Git and Subversion etc. Where version control has comprehensive tools for tracking users and file revisions, Coda’s file-sharing tool has none of it and is better-suited to quick and lightweight collaborative editing. There’s no rolling back, no commits, no branching or merging. Once a file has been shared with other Coda users (who must be explicitly invited) the file opens automatically in their Coda app where everyone can see each person’s edits happen live as each character is typed or removed. This means multiple people can work on the same file simultaneously in real-time. It seems Panic was allowed to use it in Coda where it has lived a quiet existence since version 1.ĭepending on the method you have a few options but for the purpose of this tutorial I will only discuss the (non-LAN) Internet method.Īs it applies to Coda it allows two or more users to share files over a LAN or with any remote user by using your computer’s IP address or a special “Sharing URL” to connect a remote user to your file. The tool in question was originally developed by The Coding Monkey’s and is called, SubEthaEdit. Or just use the standalone SubEthaEdit app. Apparently it was one of the two least used features along with the database editor. I’m sorry to say Panic has dropped this feature from their Nova editor so if you want to use it you’ll need to fire up Coda.