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Emmet

by sergeche ST2/ST3 Top 25

Emmet (ex-Zen Coding) for Sublime Text

Details

Installs

  • Total 694K
  • Win 403K
  • OS X 189K
  • Linux 102K
Oct 19 Oct 18 Oct 17 Oct 16 Oct 15 Oct 14 Oct 13 Oct 12 Oct 11 Oct 10 Oct 9 Oct 8 Oct 7 Oct 6 Oct 5 Oct 4 Oct 3 Oct 2 Oct 1 Sep 30 Sep 29 Sep 28 Sep 27 Sep 26 Sep 25 Sep 24 Sep 23 Sep 22 Sep 21 Sep 20 Sep 19 Sep 18 Sep 17 Sep 16 Sep 15 Sep 14 Sep 13 Sep 12 Sep 11 Sep 10 Sep 9 Sep 8 Sep 7 Sep 6 Sep 5 Sep 4
Windows 499 1126 1685 1550 1649 1610 1587 979 1099 1480 1588 1732 1550 1621 869 1065 1356 1578 1515 1557 1720 1055 966 1480 1613 1604 1782 1744 819 1010 1330 1599 1685 1670 1615 891 1057 1485 1579 1500 1514 1364 930 1017 1507 1643
OS X 271 605 769 571 557 600 612 350 416 581 550 628 593 602 295 355 475 578 526 608 673 375 319 507 633 522 583 601 317 320 474 567 602 609 576 318 339 468 549 545 574 537 366 368 491 583
Linux 111 278 325 333 309 336 303 225 234 282 305 300 337 329 227 221 314 341 343 325 333 260 252 301 330 347 332 329 218 229 283 280 316 324 302 234 227 310 308 310 325 288 216 250 277 346

Readme

Source
raw.​githubusercontent.​com

Emmet for Sublime Text

Get Support

Official Emmet plugin (previously called Zen Coding) for Sublime Text.

How to install

Warning: this plugin may not work at all in some OSes since it written in JavaScript and uses PyV8 and Google V8 binaries to run. If you experience problems or editor crashes please fill an issue.

With Package Control:

  1. Run “Package Control: Install Package” command, find and install Emmet plugin.
  2. Restart ST editor (if required)

Manually:

  1. Clone or download git repo into your packages folder (in ST, find Browse Packages… menu item to open this folder)
  2. Restart ST editor (if required)

WARNING: When plugin is installed, it will automatically download required PyV8 binary so you have to wait a bit (see Loading PyV8 binary message on status bar). If you experience issues with automatic PyV8 loader, try to install it manually.

New features of Emmet (compared with old Zen Coding)

Available actions

Increment/Decrement Number actions:

  • Increment by 1: Ctrl+↑
  • Decrement by 1: Ctrl+↓
  • Increment by 0.1: Alt+↑
  • Decrement by 0.1: Alt+↓
  • Increment by 10: ⌥⌘↑ / Shift+Alt+↑
  • Decrement by 10: ⌥⌘↓ / Shift+Alt+↓

Extensions support

You can easily extend Emmet with new actions and filters or customize existing ones. In Emmet.sublime-settings, define extensions_path setting and Emmet will load all .js and .json files in specified folder at startup.

The default value of extensions_path is ~/emmet, which points to emmet folder inside your OS user’s home folder.

Also, you can create sections named as extension files (e.g. snippets, preferences and syntaxProfiles) inside user’s Emmet.sublime-settings file and write your customizations there. See original settings file for examples.

Overriding keyboard shortcuts

Sublime Text is a great text editor with lots of features and actions. Most of these actions are bound to keyboard shortcuts so it’s nearly impossible to provide convenient plugin shortcuts for third-party plugins.

If you’re unhappy with default keymap, you can disable individual keyboard shortcuts with disabled_keymap_actions preference of Emmet.sublime-settings file.

Use a comma-separated list of action names which default keyboard shortcuts should be disabled. For example, if you want to release Ctrl+E (“Expand Abbreviation”) and Ctrl+U (“Update Image Size”) shortcuts, your must set the following value:

"disabled_keymap_actions": "expand_abbreviation, update_image_size"

You should refer Default (Your-OS-Name).sublime-keymap file to get action ids (look for args/action key).

To disable all default shortcuts, set value to all:

"disabled_keymap_actions": "all"

Not that if you disabled any action like so and you’re create your own keyboard shortcut, you should not use emmet_action_enabled.ACTION_NAME context since this is the key that disables action.

Tab key handler

Emmet plugin allows you to expand abbreviations with Tab key, just like regular snippets. On the other hand, due to dynamic nature and extensive syntax, sometimes you may get unexpected results. This section describes how Tab handler works and how you can fine-tune it.

By default, Tab handler works in a limited syntax scopes: HTML, XML, HAML, CSS, SASS/SCSS, LESS and strings in programming languages (like JavaScript, Python, Ruby etc.). It means:

  • You have to switch your document to one of the syntaxes listed above to expand abbreviations by Tab key.
  • With Ctrl-E shortcut, you can expand abbreviations everywhere, its scope is not limited.
  • When you expand abbreviation inside strings of programming languages, the output is generated with special output profile named line that generates output as a single line.

To fine-tune Tab key handler, you can use the following settings in user’s Emmet.sublime-settings file:

  • disable_tab_abbreviations_for_scopes — a comma-separated list of syntax scopes where Tab key handler should be disabled. For example, if you want disable handler inside strings of programming languages and HAML syntax, your setting will look like this:
"disable_tab_abbreviations_for_scopes": "text.haml, string"
  • disabled_single_snippet_for_scopes — a comma-separated list of syntax scopes where Tab handler should be disabled when expanding a single abbreviation. Currently, ST doesn’t provide API for getting list of native snippets. So, for example, if you try to expand a php abbreviation, it will be passed to Emmet which outputs <php></php> instead of PHP block as defined in native ST snippets. As a workaround, if you’re trying to expand a single abbreviation inside scope defined in disabled_single_snippet_for_scopes setting Emmet will look for its name inside its own snippets catalog first, inside known_html_tags setting second and if it’s not found, it allows ST to handle it and expand native abbreviation, if matched.
  • known_html_tags — a space-separated list of all known HTML tags used for lookup as described above.

If you’re unhappy with Emmet tab handler behavior, you can disable it: just add "disable_tab_abbreviations": true into user’s Preferences.sublime-settings file.