It requires Rainmeter installed. If you did not install it in the default directory (which is C:/Program Files/Rainmeter) it tries to search for it in your registry. There is a chance, that you installed it in portable mode, that way it has no way to identify where it is installed.
Use rainmeter_path to specify where your Rainmeter is installed like in my installation:
There are many ways to be different - there is only one way to be yourself - be amazing at it
The law of averages says what it means; even if you get everything right, you will get something wrong. Therefore; self managing error trapping initiates another set of averages - amongst the errors, some of them will not be errors, instead those instances will appear to be "luck". One cannot complain of the 'appearance' of 'infinite regress of causation', even if it does not have a predictable pattern, only that it requires luck to achieve.
There are many ways to be different - there is only one way to be yourself - be amazing at it
The law of averages says what it means; even if you get everything right, you will get something wrong. Therefore; self managing error trapping initiates another set of averages - amongst the errors, some of them will not be errors, instead those instances will appear to be "luck". One cannot complain of the 'appearance' of 'infinite regress of causation', even if it does not have a predictable pattern, only that it requires luck to achieve.
There are many ways to be different - there is only one way to be yourself - be amazing at it
The law of averages says what it means; even if you get everything right, you will get something wrong. Therefore; self managing error trapping initiates another set of averages - amongst the errors, some of them will not be errors, instead those instances will appear to be "luck". One cannot complain of the 'appearance' of 'infinite regress of causation', even if it does not have a predictable pattern, only that it requires luck to achieve.
Thank you for your report. I am quite baffled. In the image you send, it suggests that you are using a version at most 2.7.1 but the latest is 2.9.0. I also see that you have Package Control installed. I assume you used that to install Rainmeter?
If not please follow the steps provided at https://github.com/thatsIch/sublime-rainmeter#with-package-control
You should get an entry in Tool > Rainmeter > Color Picker
Also just more steps to verify:
In your AppData\Roaming\Sublime Text 3\Installed Packages folder should be a Rainmeter.sublime-package file around 644 KB in size. If it is smaller, please try to run CTRL + SHIFT + P, Upgrade Package on Rainmeter
There are many ways to be different - there is only one way to be yourself - be amazing at it
The law of averages says what it means; even if you get everything right, you will get something wrong. Therefore; self managing error trapping initiates another set of averages - amongst the errors, some of them will not be errors, instead those instances will appear to be "luck". One cannot complain of the 'appearance' of 'infinite regress of causation', even if it does not have a predictable pattern, only that it requires luck to achieve.
There are many ways to be different - there is only one way to be yourself - be amazing at it
The law of averages says what it means; even if you get everything right, you will get something wrong. Therefore; self managing error trapping initiates another set of averages - amongst the errors, some of them will not be errors, instead those instances will appear to be "luck". One cannot complain of the 'appearance' of 'infinite regress of causation', even if it does not have a predictable pattern, only that it requires luck to achieve.
There are many ways to be different - there is only one way to be yourself - be amazing at it
The law of averages says what it means; even if you get everything right, you will get something wrong. Therefore; self managing error trapping initiates another set of averages - amongst the errors, some of them will not be errors, instead those instances will appear to be "luck". One cannot complain of the 'appearance' of 'infinite regress of causation', even if it does not have a predictable pattern, only that it requires luck to achieve.
The shortcut meter/measure formats in Notepad++ from whoever are awesome.
You can access the snippets in 2 ways:
1. Type 't' in the document, to show a popup list of template snippets for meters and measures.
2. Select 'Tools' menu and 'Snippets...' for a window list.