
/cdn.vox-cdn.com/assets/1132105/diet_coda_screenshot_640.jpg)
I also found the text in the new tabs to be far less readable when in icon mode making quick hops between pages impossible because now I have to actually READ the tab text rather than glance at it.

Small point, I also dislike the way the tabs no longer square off visually with the document area, by moving the start of tab bar to the left of the open document they destroyed the "Feng Shui" of the interface.

How much development time went into the visual tabs to create a useless and ineffective "feature" to "fix" a problem that wasn't there? I really dislike the excessive space it uses, the way it insists on ordering new tabs aplhabetically thereby defeating the way I organize the tabs based on the progression of user movement between the various pages I'm working on. I no longer have to deal with the horrible tab bar. Yesterday I reverted back to Coda 1.7 and my productivity has shot up 20%. Panic has obviously put so much love into this, but the whole thing is undermined by essential features they just can't seem to get working properly. How is it that the same company can't manage to get exactly the same feature working in another app, even after 9 updates over more than a year? And my SFTP connections all work perfectly fine in Transmit, with the same config and key. If they aren't competent enough to make it work properly, I'm just not interested. Not interested in any other convoluted workarounds either. I'm obviously not going to delete my SSH config just because this app is still so fundamentally broken, but that leaves me with no way to connect to any of my sites.
#Coda 2 go password#
Entering a password is futile, as it sees I have a key in ~/.ssh and insists on using that instead (even though it's incapable of doing so). The *exact* same server/config works in Transmit (and every other app). It's unbelievable that SFTP via SSH key *still* doesn't work in 2.0.9. Unfortunately it's still completely terrible. I wanted to give this another shot to see how it's shaping up after a few updates.
