1389 lines
56 KiB
Plaintext
1389 lines
56 KiB
Plaintext
*UltiSnips.txt* For Vim version 7.0 or later.
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The Ultimate Plugin for Snippets in Vim~
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UltiSnips *snippet* *snippets* *UltiSnips*
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1. Description |UltiSnips-description|
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1.1 Requirements |UltiSnips-requirements|
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1.2 Acknowledgments |UltiSnips-acknowledgments|
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2. Installation and Updating |UltiSnips-installnupdate|
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3. Settings & Commands |UltiSnips-settings|
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3.1 Commands |UltiSnips-commands|
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3.2 Triggers |UltiSnips-triggers|
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3.2.1 Using your own trigger functions |UltiSnips-trigger-functions|
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3.2.2 Path to Python Module |UltiSnips-python-module-path|
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3.3 Snippet Search Path |UltiSnips-snippet-search-path|
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3.4 Warning About Select Mode Mappings |UltiSnips-warning-smappings|
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3.5 Functions |UltiSnips-functions|
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3.5.1 UltiSnips#AddSnippetWithPriority |UltiSnips#AddSnippetWithPriority|
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3.5.2 UltiSnips#Anon |UltiSnips#Anon|
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3.5.3 UltiSnips#SnippetsInCurrentScope |UltiSnips#SnippetsInCurrentScope|
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3.6 Missing python support |UltiSnips-python-warning|
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4. Syntax |UltiSnips-syntax|
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4.1 Adding Snippets |UltiSnips-adding-snippets|
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4.1.1 Character Escaping |UltiSnips-character-escaping|
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4.2 Plaintext Snippets |UltiSnips-plaintext-snippets|
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4.3 Visual Placeholder |UltiSnips-visual-placeholder|
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4.4 Interpolation |UltiSnips-interpolation|
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4.4.1 Shellcode |UltiSnips-shellcode|
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4.4.2 VimScript |UltiSnips-vimscript|
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4.4.3 Python |UltiSnips-python|
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4.4.4 Global Snippets |UltiSnips-globals|
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4.5 Tabstops and Placeholders |UltiSnips-tabstops|
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4.6 Mirrors |UltiSnips-mirrors|
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4.7 Transformations |UltiSnips-transformations|
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4.7.1 Replacement String |UltiSnips-replacement-string|
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4.7.2 Demos |UltiSnips-demos|
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4.8 Clearing snippets |UltiSnips-clearing-snippets|
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5. UltiSnips and Other Plugins |UltiSnips-other-plugins|
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5.1 Existing Integrations |UltiSnips-integrations|
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5.2 Extending UltiSnips |UltiSnips-extending|
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6. Helping Out |UltiSnips-helping|
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7. Contact |UltiSnips-contact|
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8. Contributors |UltiSnips-contributors|
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This plugin only works if 'compatible' is not set.
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{Vi does not have any of these features}
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{only available when |+python| or |+python3| have been enabled at compile time}
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==============================================================================
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1. Description *UltiSnips-description*
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UltiSnips provides snippet management for the Vim editor. A snippet is a short
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piece of text that is either re-used often or contains a lot of redundant
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text. UltiSnips allows you to insert a snippet with only a few key strokes.
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Snippets are common in structured text like source code but can also be used
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for general editing like, for example, inserting a signature in an email or
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inserting the current date in a text file.
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UltiSnips was developed using the TDD (Test-driven development) philosophy.
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This ensures that features do not disappear and bugs do not reappear after
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they have been fixed.
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On my blog, http://www.sirver.net, I posted several short screencasts, which
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make a great introduction to UltiSnips, illustrating its features and usage.
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http://www.sirver.net/blog/2011/12/30/first-episode-of-ultisnips-screencast/
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http://www.sirver.net/blog/2012/01/08/second-episode-of-ultisnips-screencast/
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http://www.sirver.net/blog/2012/02/05/third-episode-of-ultisnips-screencast/
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http://www.sirver.net/blog/2012/03/31/fourth-episode-of-ultisnips-screencast/
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1.1 Requirements *UltiSnips-requirements*
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----------------
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This plugin works with Vim version 7.0 or later. It only works if the
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'compatible' setting is not set.
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This plugin requires python >= 2.6. It has been specifically tested using
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python 2.7 and python 3.2 but should theoretically work on all versions of
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python >= 2.6.
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The Python 2.x or Python 3.x interface must be available. In other words, Vim
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must be compiled with either the |+python| feature or the |+python3| feature.
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The following commands show how to test if you have python compiled in Vim.
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They print '1' if the python version is compiled in, '0' if not.
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Test if Vim is compiled with python version 2.x: >
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:echo has("python")
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The python version Vim is linked against can be found with: >
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:py import sys; print(sys.version)
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Test if Vim is compiled with python version 3.x: >
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:echo has("python3")
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The python version Vim is linked against can be found with: >
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:py3 import sys; print(sys.version)
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Note that Vim is maybe not using your system-wide installed python version, so
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make sure to check the Python version inside of Vim.
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UltiSnips attempts to auto-detect which python version is compiled into Vim.
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Unfortunately, in some versions of Vim this detection does not work.
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In that case you have to explicitly tell UltiSnips which version to use using
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the 'UltiSnipsUsePythonVersion' global variable.
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To use python version 2.x: >
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let g:UltiSnipsUsePythonVersion = 2
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To use python version 3.x: >
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let g:UltiSnipsUsePythonVersion = 3
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1.2 Acknowledgments *UltiSnips-acknowledgments*
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-------------------
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UltiSnips was inspired by the snippets feature of TextMate
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(http://macromates.com/), the GUI text editor for Mac OS X. Managing snippets
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in Vim is not new. I want to thank Michael Sanders, the author of snipMate,
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for some implementation details I borrowed from his plugin and for the
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permission to use his snippets.
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=============================================================================
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2. Installation and Updating *UltiSnips-installnupdate*
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The recommended way of getting ultisnips is to track SirVer/ultisnips on
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github. The master branch is always stable.
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Using Pathogen: *UltiSnips-using-pathogen*
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If you are a pathogen user, you can track the official mirror of UltiSnips on
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github: >
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$ cd ~/.vim/
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$ git submodule add git://github.com/SirVer/ultisnips.git bundle/ultisnips
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If you also want the default snippets, also track >
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$ git submodule add https://github.com/honza/vim-snippets.git
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See the pathogen documentation for more details on how to update a bundle.
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Using a downloaded packet: *UltiSnips-using-a-downloaded-packet*
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Download the packet and unpack into a directory of your choice. Then add this
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directory to your Vim runtime path by adding this line to your vimrc file. >
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set runtimepath+=~/.vim/ultisnips_rep
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UltiSnips also needs that Vim sources files from the ftdetect/ directory.
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Unfortunately, Vim only allows this directory in the .vim directory. You
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therefore have to symlink/copy the files: >
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mkdir -p ~/.vim/ftdetect/
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ln -s ~/.vim/ultisnips_rep/ftdetect/* ~/.vim/ftdetect/
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Restart Vim and UltiSnips should work. To access the help, use >
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:helptags ~/.vim/ultisnips_rep/doc
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:help UltiSnips
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UltiSnips comes without snippets. The default snippets can be found here:
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https://github.com/honza/vim-snippets
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=============================================================================
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3. Settings & Commands *UltiSnips-settings*
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3.1 Commands *UltiSnips-commands*
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------------
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*:UltiSnipsEdit*
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The UltiSnipsEdit command opens a private snippet definition file for the
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current filetype. If no snippet file exists, a new file is created. If used as
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UltiSnipsEdit! all public snippet files are taken into account too. If
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multiple files match the search, the user gets to choose the file.
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There are several variables associated with the UltiSnipsEdit command.
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*g:UltiSnipsEditSplit*
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g:UltiSnipsEditSplit Defines how the edit window is opened. Possible
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values:
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|normal| Default. Opens in the current window.
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|horizontal| Splits the window horizontally.
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|vertical| Splits the window vertically.
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*g:UltiSnipsSnippetsDir*
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g:UltiSnipsSnippetsDir
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Defines the directory private snippet definition
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files are stored in. For example, if the variable
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is set to "~/.vim/mydir/UltiSnips" and the current
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'filetype' is "cpp", then :UltiSnipsEdit will open
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"~/.vim/mydir/UltiSnips/cpp.snippets". Note that
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directories named "snippets" are reserved for
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snipMate snippets and cannot be used.
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*:UltiSnipsAddFiletypes*
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The UltiSnipsAddFiletypes command allows for explicit merging of other snippet
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filetypes for the current buffer. For example, if you edit a .rst file but
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also want the Lua snippets to be available you can issue the command >
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:UltiSnipsAddFiletypes rst.lua
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using the dotted filetype syntax. Order is important, the first filetype in
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this list will be the one used for UltiSnipsEdit and the list is
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ordered by evaluation priority. Consequently, you might add this to your
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ftplugin/rails.vim >
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:UltiSnipsAddFiletypes rails.ruby
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I mention rails first because I want to edit rails snippets when using
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UltiSnipsEdit and because rails snippets should overwrite equivalent ruby
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snippets. The priority will now be rails -> ruby -> all. If you have some
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special programming snippets that should have lower priority than your ruby
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snippets you can call >
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:UltiSnipsAddFiletypes ruby.programming
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The priority will then be rails -> ruby -> programming -> all.
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3.2 Triggers *UltiSnips-triggers*
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------------
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You can define the keys used to trigger UltiSnips actions by setting global
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variables. Variables define the keys used to expand a snippet, jump forward
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and jump backwards within a snippet, and list all available snippets in the
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current expand context. The variables with their default values are: >
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g:UltiSnipsExpandTrigger <tab>
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g:UltiSnipsListSnippets <c-tab>
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g:UltiSnipsJumpForwardTrigger <c-j>
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g:UltiSnipsJumpBackwardTrigger <c-k>
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The g:UltiSnipsExpandTrigger and g:UltiSnipsJumpForwardTrigger can be set to
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the same value. To simulate TextMate behavior, add the following lines to your
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vimrc file. >
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let g:UltiSnipsExpandTrigger="<tab>"
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let g:UltiSnipsJumpForwardTrigger="<tab>"
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let g:UltiSnipsJumpBackwardTrigger="<s-tab>"
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UltiSnips will only map the jump triggers while a snippet is active to
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interfer as little as possible with other mappings.
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The default value for g:UltiSnipsJumpBackwardTrigger interferes with the
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built-in complete function: |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-K|. A workaround is to add the
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following to your vimrc file or switching to a plugin like Supertab or
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YouCompleteMe. >
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inoremap <c-x><c-k> <c-x><c-k>
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3.2.1 Using your own trigger functions *UltiSnips-trigger-functions*
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--------------------------------------
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For advanced users there are four functions that you can map directly to a
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key and that correspond to some of the triggers previously defined:
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g:UltiSnipsExpandTrigger <--> UltiSnips#ExpandSnippet
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g:UltiSnipsJumpForwardTrigger <--> UltiSnips#JumpForwards
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g:UltiSnipsJumpBackwardTrigger <--> UltiSnips#JumpBackwards
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If you have g:UltiSnipsExpandTrigger and g:UltiSnipsJumpForwardTrigger set
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to the same value then the function you are actually going to use is
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UltiSnips#ExpandSnippetOrJump.
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Each time any of the functions UltiSnips#ExpandSnippet,
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UltiSnips#ExpandSnippet, UltiSnips#JumpBackwards or UltiSnips#JumpBackwards is
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called a global variable is set that contains the return value of the
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corresponding function.
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The corresponding variables and functions are:
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UltiSnips#ExpandSnippet --> g:ulti_expand_res (0: fail, 1: success)
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UltiSnips#ExpandSnippetOrJump --> g:ulti_expand_or_jump_res (0: fail,
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1: expand, 2: jump)
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UltiSnips#JumpForwards --> g:ulti_jump_forwards_res (0: fail, 1: success)
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UltiSnips#JumpBackwards --> g:ulti_jump_backwards_res (0: fail, 1: success)
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To see how these return values may come in handy, suppose that you want to map
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a key to expand or jump, but if none of these actions is successful you want
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to call another function. UltiSnips already does this automatically for
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supertab, but this allows you individual fine tuning of your Tab key usage.
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Usage is as follows: You define a function >
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let g:ulti_expand_or_jump_res = 0 "default value, just set once
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function! Ulti_ExpandOrJump_and_getRes()
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call UltiSnips#ExpandSnippetOrJump()
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return g:ulti_expand_or_jump_res
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endfunction
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then you define your mapping as >
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inoremap <NL> <C-R>=(Ulti_ExpandOrJump_and_getRes() > 0)?"":IMAP_Jumpfunc('', 0)<CR>
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and if the you can't expand or jump from the current location then the
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alternative function IMAP_Jumpfunc('', 0) is called.
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3.2.2 Path to Python module *UltiSnips-python-module-path*
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---------------------------
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For even more advanced usage, you can directly write python functions using
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UltiSnip's python modules.
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Here is a small example funtion that expands a snippet: >
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function! s:Ulti_ExpandSnip()
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Python << EOF
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import sys, vim
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from UltiSnips import UltiSnips_Manager
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UltiSnips_Manager.expand()
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EOF
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return ""
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endfunction
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3.3 Snippet Search Path *UltiSnips-snippet-search-path*
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-----------------------
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UltiSnips snippet definition files are stored in one or more directories.
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There are several variables used to indicate those directories and to define
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how UltiSnips loads snippets.
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Snippet definition files are stored in snippet directories. A snippet
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directory must be a subdirectory of a directory defined in the 'runtimepath'
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option. The variable g:UltiSnipsSnippetDirectories defines a list of names
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used for snippet directories. Note that "snippets" is reserved for snipMate
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snippets and cannot be used. The default is shown below. >
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let g:UltiSnipsSnippetDirectories=["UltiSnips"]
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UltiSnips will search each 'runtimepath' directory for the subdirectory names
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defined in g:UltiSnipsSnippetDirectories in the order they are defined. For
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example, if you keep your snippets in a .vim subdirectory called
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"mycoolsnippets" and you want to make use of the default snippets that come
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with UltiSnips, add the following to your vimrc file. >
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let g:UltiSnipsSnippetDirectories=["UltiSnips", "mycoolsnippets"]
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If you do not want to use the third party snippets that come with plugins,
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define the variable accordingly: >
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let g:UltiSnipsSnippetDirectories=["mycoolsnippets"]
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You can also redefine the search path on a buffer by buffer basis by setting
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the variable b:UltiSnipsSnippetDirectories. This variable takes precedence
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over the global variable.
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|UltiSnips-adding-snippets| explains which files are parsed for a given filetype.
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3.4 Warning About Select Mode Mappings *UltiSnips-warning-smappings*
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--------------------------------------
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Vim's help document for |mapmode-s| states: >
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NOTE: Mapping a printable character in Select mode may confuse the user.
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It's better to explicitly use :xmap and :smap for printable characters. Or
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use :sunmap after defining the mapping.
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However, most Vim plugins, including some default Vim plugins, do not adhere
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to this. UltiSnips uses Select mode to mark tabstops in snippets for
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overwriting. Existing Visual+Select mode mappings will interfere. Therefore,
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UltiSnips issues a |:sunmap| command to remove each Select mode mapping for
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printable characters. No other mappings are touched. In particular, UltiSnips
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does not change existing normal, insert or visual mode mappings.
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If this behavior is not desired, you can disable it by adding this line to
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your vimrc file. >
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let g:UltiSnipsRemoveSelectModeMappings = 0
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If you want to disable this feature for specific mappings only, add them to
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the list of mappings to be ignored. For example, the following lines in your
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vimrc file will unmap all Select mode mappings except those mappings
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containing either the string "somePlugin" or the string "otherPlugin" in its
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complete definition as listed by the |:smap| command. >
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let g:UltiSnipsRemoveSelectModeMappings = 1
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let g:UltiSnipsMappingsToIgnore = [ "somePlugin", "otherPlugin" ]
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3.5 Functions *UltiSnips-functions*
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-------------
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UltiSnips provides some functions for extending core functionality.
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3.5.1 UltiSnips#AddSnippetWithPriority *UltiSnips#AddSnippetWithPriority*
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The first function is UltiSnips#AddSnippetWithPriority(trigger, value, description,
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options, filetyp, priority). It adds a new snippet with the provided trigger, value,
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description, and options to the current list of snippets. See
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|UltiSnips-syntax| for details on the meaning of the function arguments. The
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Priority is a number that defines which snippet should be preferred over
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others. See the priority keyword in|UltiSnips-add-snippets|.
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3.5.2 UltiSnips#Anon *UltiSnips#Anon*
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The second function is UltiSnips#Anon(value, ...). It expands an anonymous
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snippet. Anonymous snippets are defined on the spot, expanded and immediately
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discarded again. Anonymous snippets are not added to the global list of
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snippets, so they cannot be expanded a second time unless the function is
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called again. The function takes three optional arguments, in order: trigger,
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description, options. Arguments coincide with the arguments of the
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|UltiSnips#AddSnippetWithPriority| function of the same name. The trigger and
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options arguments can change the way the snippet expands. The description is
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unused at this point.
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An example use case might be this line from a reStructuredText plugin file:
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inoremap <silent> $$ $$<C-R>=UltiSnips#Anon(':latex:\`$1\`', '$$')<cr>
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This expands the snippet whenever two $ signs are typed.
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Note: The right-hand side of the mapping starts with an immediate retype of
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the '$$' trigger and passes '$$' to the function as the trigger argument.
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This is required in order for UltiSnips to have access to the characters
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typed so it can determine if the trigger matches or not.
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3.5.3 UltiSnips#SnippetsInCurrentScope *UltiSnips#SnippetsInCurrentScope*
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A third function is UltiSnips#SnippetsInCurrentScope which is the equivalent
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of snipmate GetSnipsInCurrentScope function.
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This function simply returns a vim dictionary with the snippets whose trigger
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matches the current word.
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This function does not add any new functionality to ultisnips directly but
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allows to use third party plugins to integrate the current available snippets.
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An example of such third party plugin is SnippetCompleteSnipMate which uses
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the function GetSnipsInCurrentScope to integrate the current available
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snippets with user defined abbreviations and provides these and a completion
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menu.
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This script is located in
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http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=4276.
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Note: If you check the above website it lists two dependencies: the
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SnippetComplete plugin and snipmate.
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You do need the SnippetComplete plugin but you obviously don't need snipmate,
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you just have to define the function GetSnipsInCurrentScope. Put the following
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in your vimrc:
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function! GetSnipsInCurrentScope()
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return UltiSnips#SnippetsInCurrentScope()
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endfunction
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As a second example on how to use this function consider the following
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function and mapping definition:
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function! ExpandPossibleShorterSnippet()
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if len(UltiSnips#SnippetsInCurrentScope()) == 1 "only one candidate...
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let curr_key = keys(UltiSnips#SnippetsInCurrentScope())[0]
|
|
normal diw
|
|
exe "normal a" . curr_key
|
|
exe "normal a "
|
|
return 1
|
|
endif
|
|
return 0
|
|
endfunction
|
|
inoremap <silent> <C-L> <C-R>=(ExpandPossibleShorterSnippet() == 0? '': UltiSnips#ExpandSnippet())<CR>
|
|
|
|
If the trigger for your snippet is lorem, you type lor, and you have no other
|
|
snippets whose trigger matches lor then hitting <C-L> will expand to whatever
|
|
lorem expands to.
|
|
|
|
|
|
3.6 Warning about missing python support *UltiSnips-python-warning*
|
|
----------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
When UltiSnips is loaded, it will check that the running Vim was compiled with
|
|
python support. If no support is detected, a warning will be displayed and
|
|
loading of UltiSnips will be skipped.
|
|
|
|
If you would like to suppress this warning message, you may add the following
|
|
line to your vimrc file.
|
|
|
|
let g:UltiSnipsNoPythonWarning = 1
|
|
|
|
This may be useful if your Vim configuration files are shared across several
|
|
systems where some of them may not have Vim compiled with python support.
|
|
|
|
=============================================================================
|
|
4. Syntax *UltiSnips-syntax*
|
|
|
|
This chapter describes how to write your own snippets and snippet definition
|
|
syntax. Examples are used to help illustrate.
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.1 Adding Snippets *UltiSnips-adding-snippets*
|
|
-------------------
|
|
|
|
See |UltiSnips-snippet-search-path| for an explanation of where directories
|
|
with snippet definitions should be located.
|
|
|
|
Using a strategy similar to how Vim detects |ftplugins|, UltiSnips iterates
|
|
over the snippet definition directories looking for files with names of the
|
|
following patterns: ft.snippets, ft_*.snippets, or ft/*, where "ft" is the
|
|
'filetype' of the current document and "*" is a shell-like wildcard matching
|
|
any string including the empty string. The following table shows some typical
|
|
snippet filenames and their associated filetype.
|
|
|
|
snippet filename filetype ~
|
|
ruby.snippets ruby
|
|
perl.snippets perl
|
|
c.snippets c
|
|
c_my.snippets c
|
|
c/a c
|
|
c/b.snippets c
|
|
all.snippets *all
|
|
all/a.snippets *all
|
|
|
|
* The 'all' filetype is unique. It represents snippets available for use when
|
|
editing any document regardless of the filetype. A date insertion snippet, for
|
|
example, would fit well in the all.snippets file.
|
|
|
|
UltiSnips understands Vim's dotted filetype syntax. For example, if you define
|
|
a dotted filetype for the CUDA C++ framework, e.g. ":set ft=cuda.cpp", then
|
|
UltiSnips will search for and activate snippets for both the cuda and cpp
|
|
filetypes.
|
|
|
|
The snippets file syntax is simple. All lines starting with a # character are
|
|
considered comments. Comments are ignored by UltiSnips. Use them to document
|
|
snippets.
|
|
|
|
A line beginning with the keyword 'extends' provides a way of combining
|
|
snippet files. When the 'extends' directive is included in a snippet file, it
|
|
instructs UltiSnips to include all snippets from the indicated filetypes.
|
|
|
|
The syntax looks like this: >
|
|
extends ft1, ft2, ft3
|
|
|
|
For example, the first line in cpp.snippets looks like this: >
|
|
extends c
|
|
When UltiSnips activates snippets for a cpp file, it first looks for all c
|
|
snippets and activates them as well. This is a convenient way to create
|
|
specialized snippet files from more general ones. Multiple 'extends' lines are
|
|
permitted in a snippet file, and they can be included anywhere in the file.
|
|
|
|
|
|
A line beginning with the keyword 'priority' sets the priority for all
|
|
snippets defined in the current file after this line. The default priority for
|
|
a file is always 0. When a snippet should be expanded, UltiSnips will collect
|
|
all snippet definitions from all sources that match the trigger and keep only
|
|
the ones with the highest priority. For example, all shipped snippets have a
|
|
priority < 0, so that user defined snippets always overwrite shipped snippets.
|
|
|
|
|
|
A line beginning with the keyword 'snippet' marks the beginning of snippet
|
|
definition and a line starting with the keyword 'endsnippet' marks the end.
|
|
The snippet definition is placed between the lines. Here is a snippet of an
|
|
'if' statement for the Unix shell (sh) filetype.
|
|
|
|
snippet if "if ... then (if)"
|
|
if ${2:[[ ${1:condition} ]]}; then
|
|
${0:#statements}
|
|
fi
|
|
endsnippet
|
|
|
|
The start line takes the following form: >
|
|
|
|
snippet tab_trigger [ "description" [ options ] ]
|
|
|
|
The tab_trigger is required, but the description and options are optional.
|
|
|
|
The 'tab_trigger' is the word or string sequence used to trigger the snippet.
|
|
Generally a single word is used but the tab_trigger can include spaces. If you
|
|
wish to include spaces, you must wrap the tab trigger in quotes. >
|
|
|
|
snippet "tab trigger" [ "description" [ options ] ]
|
|
|
|
The quotes are not part of the trigger. To activate the snippet type: tab trigger
|
|
followed by the snippet expand character.
|
|
|
|
It is not technically necessary to use quotes to wrap a trigger with spaces.
|
|
Any matching characters will do. For example, this is a valid snippet starting
|
|
line. >
|
|
snippet !tab trigger! [ "description" [ options ] ]
|
|
|
|
Quotes can be included as part of the trigger by wrapping the trigger in
|
|
another character. >
|
|
snippet !"tab trigger"! [ "description" [ options ] ]
|
|
|
|
To activate this snippet one would type: "tab trigger"
|
|
|
|
The 'description' is a string describing the trigger. It is helpful for
|
|
documenting the snippet and for distinguishing it from other snippets with the
|
|
same tab trigger. When a snippet is activated and more than one tab trigger
|
|
match, UltiSnips displays a list of the matching snippets with their
|
|
descriptions. The user then selects the snippet they want.
|
|
|
|
The 'options' control the behavior of the snippet. Options are indicated by
|
|
single characters. The 'options' characters for a snippet are combined into
|
|
a word without spaces.
|
|
|
|
The options currently supported are: >
|
|
b Beginning of line - A snippet with this option is expanded only if the
|
|
tab trigger is the first word on the line. In other words, if only
|
|
whitespace precedes the tab trigger, expand. The default is to expand
|
|
snippets at any position regardless of the preceding non-whitespace
|
|
characters.
|
|
|
|
i In-word expansion - By default a snippet is expanded only if the tab
|
|
trigger is the first word on the line or is preceded by one or more
|
|
whitespace characters. A snippet with this option is expanded
|
|
regardless of the preceding character. In other words, the snippet can
|
|
be triggered in the middle of a word.
|
|
|
|
w Word boundary - With this option, the snippet is expanded if
|
|
the tab trigger start matches a word boundary and the tab trigger end
|
|
matches a word boundary. In other words the tab trigger must be
|
|
preceded and followed by non-word characters. Word characters are
|
|
defined by the 'iskeyword' setting. Use this option, for example, to
|
|
permit expansion where the tab trigger follows punctuation without
|
|
expanding suffixes of larger words.
|
|
|
|
r Regular expression - With this option, the tab trigger is expected to
|
|
be a python regular expression. The snippet is expanded if the recently
|
|
typed characters match the regular expression. Note: The regular
|
|
expression MUST be quoted (or surrounded with another character) like a
|
|
multi-word tab trigger (see above) whether it has spaces or not. A
|
|
resulting match is passed to any python code blocks in the snippet
|
|
definition as the local variable "match".
|
|
|
|
t Do not expand tabs - If a snippet definition includes leading tab
|
|
characters, by default UltiSnips expands the tab characters honoring
|
|
the Vim 'shiftwidth', 'softtabstop', 'expandtab' and 'tabstop'
|
|
indentation settings. (For example, if 'expandtab' is set, the tab is
|
|
replaced with spaces.) If this option is set, UltiSnips will ignore the
|
|
Vim settings and insert the tab characters as is. This option is useful
|
|
for snippets involved with tab delimited formats, for example.
|
|
|
|
s Remove whitespace immediately before the cursor at the end of a line
|
|
before jumping to the next tabstop. This is useful if there is a
|
|
tabstop with optional text at the end of a line.
|
|
|
|
The end line is the 'endsnippet' keyword on a line by itself. >
|
|
|
|
endsnippet
|
|
|
|
When parsing snippet files, UltiSnips chops the trailing newline character
|
|
from the 'endsnippet' end line.
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.1.1 Character Escaping: *UltiSnips-character-escaping*
|
|
|
|
In snippet definitions, the characters '`', '{', '$', '\' and "'" (single
|
|
quote) have special meaning. If you want to insert one of these characters
|
|
literally, escape them with a backslash, '\'.
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.2 Plaintext Snippets *UltiSnips-plaintext-snippets*
|
|
----------------------
|
|
|
|
To illustrate plaintext snippets, let's begin with a simple example. You can
|
|
try the examples yourself. Simply edit a new file with Vim. Example snippets
|
|
will be added to the 'all.snippets' file, so you'll want to open it in Vim for
|
|
editing as well. >
|
|
~/.vim/UltiSnips/all.snippets
|
|
|
|
Add this snippet to 'all.snippets' and save the file.
|
|
|
|
------------------- SNIP -------------------
|
|
snippet bye "My mail signature"
|
|
Good bye, Sir. Hope to talk to you soon.
|
|
- Arthur, King of Britain
|
|
endsnippet
|
|
------------------- SNAP -------------------
|
|
|
|
UltiSnips detects when you write changes to a snippets file and automatically
|
|
makes the changes active. So in the empty buffer, type the tab trigger 'bye'
|
|
and then press the <Tab> key.
|
|
|
|
bye<Tab> -->
|
|
Good bye, Sir. Hope to talk to you soon.
|
|
- Arthur, King of Britain
|
|
|
|
The word 'bye' will be replaced with the text of the snippet definition.
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.3 Visual Placeholder *UltiSnips-visual-placeholder*
|
|
----------------------
|
|
|
|
Snippets can contain a special placeholder called ${VISUAL}. The ${VISUAL}
|
|
variable is expanded with the text selected just prior to expanding the
|
|
snippet.
|
|
|
|
To see how a snippet with a ${VISUAL} placeholder works, define a snippet with
|
|
the placeholder, use Vim's Visual mode to select some text, and then press the
|
|
key you use to trigger expanding a snippet (see g:UltiSnipsExpandTrigger). The
|
|
selected text is deleted, and you are dropped into Insert mode. Now type the
|
|
snippet tab trigger and press the key to trigger expansion. As the snippet
|
|
expands, the previously selected text is printed in place of the ${VISUAL}
|
|
placeholder.
|
|
|
|
The ${VISUAL} placeholder can contain default text to use when the snippet has
|
|
been triggered when not in Visual mode. The syntax is: >
|
|
${VISUAL:default text}
|
|
|
|
The ${VISUAL} placeholder can also define a transformation (see
|
|
|UltiSnips-transformations|). The syntax is: >
|
|
${VISUAL:default/search/replace/option}.
|
|
|
|
Here is a simple example illustrating a visual transformation. The snippet
|
|
will take selected text, replace every instance of "should" within it with
|
|
"is" , and wrap the result in tags.
|
|
|
|
------------------- SNIP -------------------
|
|
snippet t
|
|
<tag>${VISUAL:inside text/should/is/g}</tag>
|
|
endsnippet
|
|
------------------- SNAP -------------------
|
|
|
|
Start with this line of text: >
|
|
this should be cool
|
|
|
|
Position the cursor on the word "should", then press the key sequence: viw
|
|
(visual mode -> select inner word). Then press <Tab>, type "t" and press <Tab>
|
|
again. The result is: >
|
|
-> this <tag>is</tag> be cool
|
|
|
|
If you expand this snippet while not in Visual mode (e.g., in Insert mode type
|
|
t<Tab>), you will get: >
|
|
<tag>inside text</tag>
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.4 Interpolation *UltiSnips-interpolation*
|
|
-----------------
|
|
|
|
4.4.1 Shellcode: *UltiSnips-shellcode*
|
|
|
|
Snippets can include shellcode. Put a shell command in a snippet and when the
|
|
snippet is expanded, the shell command is replaced by the output produced when
|
|
the command is executed. The syntax for shellcode is simple: wrap the code in
|
|
backticks, '`'. When a snippet is expanded, UltiSnips runs shellcode by first
|
|
writing it to a temporary script and then executing the script. The shellcode
|
|
is replaced by the standard output. Anything you can run as a script can be
|
|
used in shellcode. Include a shebang line, for example, #!/usr/bin/perl, and
|
|
your snippet has the ability to run scripts using other programs, perl, for
|
|
example.
|
|
|
|
Here are some examples. This snippet uses a shell command to insert the
|
|
current date.
|
|
|
|
------------------- SNIP -------------------
|
|
snippet today
|
|
Today is the `date +%d.%m.%y`.
|
|
endsnippet
|
|
------------------- SNAP -------------------
|
|
|
|
today<tab> ->
|
|
Today is the 15.07.09.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This example inserts the current date using perl.
|
|
|
|
------------------- SNIP -------------------
|
|
snippet today
|
|
Today is `#!/usr/bin/perl
|
|
@a = localtime(); print $a[3] . '.' . $a[4] . '.' . ($a[5]+1900);`.
|
|
endsnippet
|
|
------------------- SNAP -------------------
|
|
today<tab> ->
|
|
Today is 15.6.2009.
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.4.2 VimScript: *UltiSnips-vimscript*
|
|
|
|
You can also use Vim scripts (sometimes called VimL) in interpolation. The
|
|
syntax is similar to shellcode. Wrap the code in backticks and to distinguish
|
|
it as a Vim script, start the code with '!v'. Here is an example that counts
|
|
the indent of the current line:
|
|
|
|
------------------- SNIP -------------------
|
|
snippet indent
|
|
Indent is: `!v indent(".")`.
|
|
endsnippet
|
|
------------------- SNAP -------------------
|
|
(note the 4 spaces in front): indent<tab> ->
|
|
(note the 4 spaces in front): Indent is: 4.
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.4.3 Python: *UltiSnips-python*
|
|
|
|
Python interpolation is by far the most powerful. The syntax is similar to Vim
|
|
scripts except code is started with '!p'. Python scripts can be run using the
|
|
python shebang '#!/usr/bin/python', but using the '!p' format comes with some
|
|
predefined objects and variables, which can simplify and shorten code. For
|
|
example, a 'snip' object instance is implied in python code. Python code using
|
|
the '!p' indicator differs in another way. Generally when a snippet is
|
|
expanded the standard output of code replaces the code. With python code the
|
|
value of the 'rv' property of the 'snip' instance replaces the code. Standard
|
|
output is ignored.
|
|
|
|
The variables automatically defined in python code are: >
|
|
|
|
fn - The current filename
|
|
path - The complete path to the current file
|
|
t - The values of the placeholders, t[1] is the text of ${1}, and so on
|
|
snip - UltiSnips.TextObjects.SnippetUtil object instance. Has methods that
|
|
simplify indentation handling.
|
|
|
|
The 'snip' object provides the following methods: >
|
|
|
|
snip.mkline(line="", indent=None):
|
|
Returns a line ready to be appended to the result. If indent
|
|
is None, then mkline prepends spaces and/or tabs appropriate to the
|
|
current 'tabstop' and 'expandtab' variables.
|
|
|
|
snip.shift(amount=1):
|
|
Shifts the default indentation level used by mkline right by the
|
|
number of spaces defined by 'shiftwidth', 'amount' times.
|
|
|
|
snip.unshift(amount=1):
|
|
Shifts the default indentation level used by mkline left by the
|
|
number of spaces defined by 'shiftwidth', 'amount' times.
|
|
|
|
snip.reset_indent():
|
|
Resets the indentation level to its initial value.
|
|
|
|
snip.opt(var, default):
|
|
Checks if the Vim variable 'var' has been set. If so, it returns the
|
|
variable's value; otherwise, it returns the value of 'default'.
|
|
|
|
The 'snip' object provides some properties as well: >
|
|
|
|
snip.rv:
|
|
'rv' is the return value, the text that will replace the python block
|
|
in the snippet definition. It is initialized to the empty string. This
|
|
deprecates the 'res' variable.
|
|
|
|
snip.c:
|
|
The text currently in the python block's position within the snippet.
|
|
It is set to empty string as soon as interpolation is completed. Thus
|
|
you can check if snip.c is != "" to make sure that the interpolation
|
|
is only done once. This deprecates the "cur" variable.
|
|
|
|
snip.v:
|
|
Data related to the ${VISUAL} placeholder. The property has two
|
|
attributes:
|
|
snip.v.mode ('v', 'V', '^V', see |visual-mode| )
|
|
snip.v.text The text that was selected.
|
|
|
|
snip.fn:
|
|
The current filename.
|
|
|
|
snip.basename:
|
|
The current filename with the extension removed.
|
|
|
|
snip.ft:
|
|
The current filetype.
|
|
|
|
For your convenience, the 'snip' object also provides the following
|
|
operators: >
|
|
|
|
snip >> amount:
|
|
Equivalent to snip.shift(amount)
|
|
snip << amount:
|
|
Equivalent to snip.unshift(amount)
|
|
snip += line:
|
|
Equivalent to "snip.rv += '\n' + snip.mkline(line)"
|
|
|
|
Any variables defined in a python block can be used in other python blocks
|
|
that follow within the same snippet. Also, the python modules 'vim', 're',
|
|
'os', 'string' and 'random' are pre-imported within the scope of snippet code.
|
|
Other modules can be imported using the python 'import' command.
|
|
|
|
Python code allows for very flexible snippets. For example, the following
|
|
snippet mirrors the first tabstop value on the same line but right aligned and
|
|
in uppercase.
|
|
|
|
------------------- SNIP -------------------
|
|
snippet wow
|
|
${1:Text}`!p snip.rv = (75-2*len(t[1]))*' '+t[1].upper()`
|
|
endsnippet
|
|
------------------- SNAP -------------------
|
|
wow<tab>Hello World ->
|
|
Hello World HELLO WORLD
|
|
|
|
The following snippet uses the regular expression option and illustrates
|
|
regular expression grouping using python's match object. It shows that the
|
|
expansion of a snippet can depend on the tab trigger used to define the
|
|
snippet, and that tab trigger itself can vary.
|
|
|
|
------------------- SNIP -------------------
|
|
snippet "be(gin)?( (\S+))?" "begin{} / end{}" br
|
|
\begin{${1:`!p
|
|
snip.rv = match.group(3) if match.group(2) is not None else "something"`}}
|
|
${2:${VISUAL}}
|
|
\end{$1}$0
|
|
endsnippet
|
|
------------------- SNAP -------------------
|
|
be<tab>center<c-j> ->
|
|
\begin{center}
|
|
|
|
\end{center}
|
|
------------------- SNAP -------------------
|
|
be center<tab> ->
|
|
\begin{center}
|
|
|
|
\end{center}
|
|
|
|
The second form is a variation of the first; both produce the same result,
|
|
but it illustrates how regular expression grouping works. Using regular
|
|
expressions in this manner has some drawbacks:
|
|
1. If you use the <Tab> key for both expanding snippets and completion then
|
|
if you typed "be form<Tab>" expecting the completion "be formatted", you
|
|
would end up with the above SNAP instead, not what you want.
|
|
2. The snippet is harder to read.
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.4.4 Global Snippets: *UltiSnips-globals*
|
|
|
|
Global snippets provide a way to reuse common code in multiple snippets.
|
|
Currently, only python code is supported. The result of executing the contents
|
|
of a global snippet is put into the globals of each python block in the
|
|
snippet file. To create a global snippet, use the keyword 'global' in place of
|
|
'snippet', and for python code, you use '!p' for the trigger. For example, the
|
|
following snippet produces the same output as the last example . However, with
|
|
this syntax the 'upper_right' snippet can be reused by other snippets.
|
|
|
|
------------------- SNIP -------------------
|
|
global !p
|
|
def upper_right(inp):
|
|
return (75 - 2 * len(inp))*' ' + inp.upper()
|
|
endglobal
|
|
|
|
snippet wow
|
|
${1:Text}`!p snip.rv = upper_right(t[1])`
|
|
endsnippet
|
|
------------------- SNAP -------------------
|
|
wow<tab>Hello World ->
|
|
Hello World HELLO WORLD
|
|
|
|
Python global functions can be stored in a python module and then imported.
|
|
This makes global functions easily accessible to all snippet files. Since Vim
|
|
7.4 you can just drop python files into ~/.vim/pythonx and import them
|
|
directly inside your snippets. For example to use
|
|
~/.vim/pythonx/my_snippets_helpers.py >
|
|
|
|
global !p
|
|
from my_snippet_helpers import *
|
|
endglobals
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.4 Tabstops and Placeholders *UltiSnips-tabstops* *UltiSnips-placeholders*
|
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-----------------------------
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Snippets are used to quickly insert reused text into a document. Often the
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text has a fixed structure with variable components. Tabstops are used to
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simplify modifying the variable content. With tabstops you can easily place
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the cursor at the point of the variable content, enter the content you want,
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then jump to the next variable component, enter that content, and continue
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until all the variable components are complete.
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The syntax for a tabstop is the dollar sign followed by a number, for example,
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'$1'. Tabstops start at number 1 and are followed in sequential order. The
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'$0' tabstop is a special tabstop. It is always the last tabstop in the
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snippet no matter how many tabstops are defined.
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Here is a simple example.
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------------------- SNIP -------------------
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snippet letter
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Dear $1,
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$0
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Yours sincerely,
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$2
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endsnippet
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------------------- SNAP -------------------
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letter<tab>Ben<c-j>Paul<c-j>Thanks for suggesting UltiSnips!->
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Dear Ben,
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Thanks for suggesting UltiSnips!
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Yours sincerely,
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Paul
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You can use <c-j> to jump to the next tabstop, and <c-k> to jump to the
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previous. The <Tab> key was not used for jumping forward because many people
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(myself included) use <Tab> for completion. See |UltiSnips-triggers| for
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help on defining different keys for tabstops.
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It is often useful to have some default text for a tabstop. The default text
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may be a value commonly used for the variable component, or it may be a word
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or phrase that reminds you what is expected for the variable component. To
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include default text, the syntax is '${1:value}'.
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The following example illustrates a snippet for the shell 'case' statement.
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The tabstops use default values to remind the user of what value is expected.
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------------------- SNIP -------------------
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snippet case
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case ${1:word} in
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${2:pattern} ) $0;;
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esac
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endsnippet
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------------------- SNAP -------------------
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case<tab>$option<c-j>-v<c-j>verbose=true
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case $option in
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-v ) verbose=true;;
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esac
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Sometimes it is useful to have a tabstop within a tabstop. To do this, simply
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include the nested tabstop as part of the default text. Consider the following
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example illustrating an HTML anchor snippet.
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------------------- SNIP -------------------
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snippet a
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<a href="${1:http://www.${2:example.com}}"</a>
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$0
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</a>
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endsnippet
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------------------- SNAP -------------------
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When this snippet is expanded, the first tabstop has a default value of
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'http://www.example.com'. If you want the 'http://' schema, jump to the next
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tabstop. It has a default value of 'example.com'. This can be replaced by
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typing whatever domain you want.
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a<tab><c-j>google.com<c-j>Google ->
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<a href="http://www.google.com">
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Google
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</a>
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If at the first tabstop you want a different url schema or want to replace the
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default url with a named anchor, '#name', for example, just type the value you
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want.
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a<tab>#top<c-j>Top ->
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<a href="#top">
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Top
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</a>
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In the last example, typing any text at the first tabstop replaces the default
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value, including the second tabstop, with the typed text. So the second
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tabstop is essentially deleted. When a tabstop jump is triggered, UltiSnips
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moves to the next remaining tabstop '$0'. This feature can be used
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intentionally as a handy way for providing optional tabstop values to the
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user. Here is an example to illustrate.
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------------------- SNIP -------------------
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snippet a
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<a href="$1"${2: class="${3:link}"}>
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$0
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</a>
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endsnippet
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------------------- SNAP -------------------
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Here, '$1' marks the first tabstop. It is assumed you always want to add a
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value for the 'href' attribute. After entering the url and pressing <c-j>, the
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snippet will jump to the second tabstop, '$2'. This tabstop is optional. The
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default text is ' class="link"'. You can press <c-j> to accept the tabstop,
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and the snippet will jump to the third tabstop, '$3', and you can enter the
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class attribute value, or, at the second tabstop you can press the backspace
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key thereby replacing the second tabstop default with an empty string,
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essentially removing it. In either case, continue by pressing <c-j> and the
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snippet will jump to the final tabstop inside the anchor.
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a<tab>http://www.google.com<c-j><c-j>visited<c-j>Google ->
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<a href="http://www.google.com" class="visited">
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Google
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</a>
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a<tab>http://www.google.com<c-j><BS><c-j>Google ->
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<a href="http://www.google.com">
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Google
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</a>
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The default text of tabstops can also contain mirrors, transformations or
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interpolation.
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4.6 Mirrors *UltiSnips-mirrors*
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-----------
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Mirrors repeat the content of a tabstop. During snippet expansion when you
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enter the value for a tabstop, all mirrors of that tabstop are replaced with
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the same value. To mirror a tabstop simply insert the tabstop again using the
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"dollar sign followed by a number" syntax, e.g., '$1'.
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A tabstop can be mirrored multiple times in one snippet, and more than one
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tabstop can be mirrored in the same snippet. A mirrored tabstop can have a
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default value defined. Only the first instance of the tabstop need have a
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default value. Mirrored tabstop will take on the default value automatically.
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Mirrors are handy for start-end tags, for example, TeX 'begin' and 'end' tag
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labels, XML and HTML tags, and C code #ifndef blocks. Here are some snippet
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examples.
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------------------- SNIP -------------------
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snippet env
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\begin{${1:enumerate}}
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$0
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\end{$1}
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endsnippet
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------------------- SNAP -------------------
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env<tab>itemize ->
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\begin{itemize}
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\end{itemize}
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------------------- SNIP -------------------
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snippet ifndef
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#ifndef ${1:SOME_DEFINE}
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#define $1
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$0
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#endif /* $1 */
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endsnippet
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------------------- SNAP -------------------
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ifndef<tab>WIN32 ->
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#ifndef WIN32
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#define WIN32
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#endif /* WIN32 */
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4.7 Transformations *UltiSnips-transformations*
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-------------------
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Note: Transformations are a bit difficult to grasp so this chapter is divided
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into two sections. The first describes transformations and their syntax, and
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the second illustrates transformations with demos.
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Transformations are like mirrors but instead of just copying text from the
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original tabstop verbatim, a regular expression is matched to the content of
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the referenced tabstop and a transformation is then applied to the matched
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pattern. The syntax and functionality of transformations in UltiSnips follow
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very closely to TextMate transformations.
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A transformation has the following syntax: >
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${<tab_stop_no/regular_expression/replacement/options}
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The components are defined as follows: >
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tab_stop_no - The number of the tabstop to reference
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regular_expression - The regular expression the value of the referenced
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tabstop is matched on
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replacement - The replacement string, explained in detail below
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options - Options for the regular expression
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The options can be any combination of >
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g - global replace
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By default, only the first match of the regular expression is
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replaced. With this option all matches are replaced.
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i - case insensitive
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By default, regular expression matching is case sensitive. With this
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option, matching is done without regard to case.
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a - ascii conversion
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By default, transformation are made on the raw utf-8 string. With
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this option, matching is done on the corresponding ASCII string
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instead, for example 'à' will become 'a'.
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This option required the python package 'unidecode'.
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The syntax of regular expressions is beyond the scope of this document. Python
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regular expressions are used internally, so the python 're' module can be used
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as a guide. See http://docs.python.org/library/re.html.
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The syntax for the replacement string is unique. The next paragraph describes
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it in detail.
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4.7.1 Replacement String: *UltiSnips-replacement-string*
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The replacement string can contain $no variables, e.g., $1, which reference
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matched groups in the regular expression. The $0 variable is special and
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yields the whole match. The replacement string can also contain special escape
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sequences: >
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\u - Uppercase next letter
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\l - Lowercase next letter
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\U - Uppercase everything till the next \E
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\L - Lowercase everything till the next \E
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\E - End upper or lowercase started with \L or \U
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\n - A newline
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\t - A literal tab
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Finally, the replacement string can contain conditional replacements using the
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syntax (?no:text:other text). This reads as follows: if the group $no has
|
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matched, insert "text", otherwise insert "other text". "other text" is
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optional and if not provided defaults to the empty string, "". This feature
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is very powerful. It allows you to add optional text into snippets.
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4.7.2 Demos: *UltiSnips-demos*
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Transformations are very powerful but often the syntax is convoluted.
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Hopefully the demos below help illustrate transformation features.
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Demo: Uppercase one character
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------------------- SNIP -------------------
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snippet title "Title transformation"
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${1:a text}
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${1/\w+\s*/\u$0/}
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endsnippet
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------------------- SNAP -------------------
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title<tab>big small ->
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big small
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Big small
|
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Demo: Uppercase one character and global replace
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------------------- SNIP -------------------
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snippet title "Titlelize in the Transformation"
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${1:a text}
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${1/\w+\s*/\u$0/g}
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endsnippet
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------------------- SNAP -------------------
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title<tab>this is a title ->
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this is a title
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This Is A Title
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Demo: ASCII transformation
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------------------- SNIP -------------------
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snippet ascii "Replace non ascii chars"
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${1: an accentued text}
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${1/.*/$0/a}
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endsnippet
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------------------- SNAP -------------------
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ascii<tab>à la pêche aux moules
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à la pêche aux moules
|
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a la peche aux moules
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Demo: Regular expression grouping
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This is a clever c-like printf snippet, the second tabstop is only shown
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when there is a format (%) character in the first tabstop.
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------------------- SNIP -------------------
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snippet printf
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printf("${1:%s}\n"${1/([^%]|%%)*(%.)?.*/(?2:, :\);)/}$2${1/([^%]|%%)*(%.)?.*/(?2:\);)/}
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endsnippet
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------------------- SNAP -------------------
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printf<tab>Hello<c-j> // End of line ->
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printf("Hello\n"); // End of line
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|
But
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printf<tab>A is: %s<c-j>A<c-j> // End of line ->
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printf("A is: %s\n", A); // End of line
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|
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There are many more examples of what can be done with transformations in the
|
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bundled snippets.
|
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|
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4.8 Clearing snippets *UltiSnips-clearing-snippets*
|
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|
To remove snippets for the current file type, use the 'clearsnippets'
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|
directive.
|
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|
------------------- SNIP -------------------
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|
clearsnippets
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|
------------------- SNAP -------------------
|
|
|
|
Without arguments, 'clearsnippets' removes all snippets defined up to that
|
|
point far for the current file type. Just a reminder, by default UltiSnips
|
|
traverses 'runtimepath' in reverse order, so 'clearsnippets' removes snippet
|
|
definitions appearing in files in 'runtimepath' after the '.snippets' file in
|
|
which it is encountered.
|
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|
|
To clear one or more specific snippet, provide the names of the snippets as
|
|
arguments to the 'clearsnippets' command. The following example will clear
|
|
the snippets 'trigger1' and 'trigger2'.
|
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|
|
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|
------------------- SNIP -------------------
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|
clearsnippets trigger1 trigger2
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|
------------------- SNAP -------------------
|
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|
|
UltiSnips comes with a set of default snippets for many file types. If you
|
|
would rather not have some of them defined, you can use 'clearsnippets' in
|
|
your personal snippets files to remove them. Note: you do not need to remove
|
|
snippets if you wish to replace them. Simply use the '!' option. (See
|
|
|UltiSnips-adding-snippets| for the options).
|
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|
|
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==============================================================================
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|
5. UltiSnips and Other Plugins *UltiSnips-other-plugins*
|
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|
|
5.1 Existing Integrations *UltiSnips-integrations*
|
|
-------------------------
|
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|
UltiSnips has built-in support for some common plugins and there are others
|
|
that are aware of UltiSnips and use it to improve the user experience. This is
|
|
an incomplete list - if you want to have your plugin listed here, just sent me
|
|
a pull request.
|
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|
*UltiSnips-snipMate*
|
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|
|
snipMate - UltiSnips is a drop in replacement for snipMate. It has many more
|
|
features, so porting snippets is still a good idea, but switching has low
|
|
friction now. UltiSnips is trying hard to truly emulate snipMate, for example
|
|
recursive tabstops are not supported in snipMate snippets (but of course in
|
|
UltiSnips snippets).
|
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|
|
YouCompleteMe - comes with out of the box completion support for UltiSnips. It
|
|
offers a really nice completion dialogue for snippets.
|
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|
|
neocomplete - UltiSnips ships with a source for neocomplete and therefore
|
|
offers out of the box completion dialogue support for it too.
|
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|
|
Supertab - UltiSnips has built-in support for Supertab. Just use a recent
|
|
enough version of both plugins and <tab> will either expand a snippet or defer
|
|
to Supertab for expansion.
|
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|
|
5.2 Extending UltiSnips *UltiSnips-extending*
|
|
-------------------------
|
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|
|
UltiSnips allows other plugins to add new snippets on the fly. Since UltiSnips
|
|
is written in python, the integration is also on a python basis. A small
|
|
example can be found in `test.py`, search for AddNewSnippetSource. Please
|
|
contact me on github if you integrate UltiSnips with your plugin so it can be
|
|
listed in the docs.
|
|
|
|
=============================================================================
|
|
6. Helping Out *UltiSnips-helping*
|
|
|
|
UltiSnips needs the help of the Vim community to keep improving. Please
|
|
consider joining this effort by providing new snippets, new features or bug
|
|
reports.
|
|
|
|
You can contribute snippets or patches in various ways. The methods are listed
|
|
below in order of convenience for me. Please be as convenient as you
|
|
can be :)
|
|
|
|
* Clone the repository on GitHub (git clone git@github.com:SirVer/ultisnips.git),
|
|
make your changes and send a pull request on GitHub.
|
|
* Make a patch, report a bug/feature request (see below) and attach the patch
|
|
to it.
|
|
* Send me an Email with a patch (see Contact section below).
|
|
* Send me an Email with the changed files only.
|
|
|
|
You can contribute by fixing or reporting bugs in our issue tracker:
|
|
https://github.com/sirver/ultisnips/issues
|
|
|
|
If you like this plugin, please vote for it on its Vim script page >
|
|
http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=2715
|
|
It is life-changing for me. Maybe it is for you too.
|
|
|
|
|
|
=============================================================================
|
|
7. Contact *UltiSnips-contact*
|
|
|
|
You can reach me at SirVer -AT- gmx -ADOT- de.
|
|
|
|
This project aims to be the one-for-all solution for Snippets for Vim. If you
|
|
miss a feature or find a bug, please contact me or add an issues to our issues
|
|
tracker.
|
|
|
|
=============================================================================
|
|
8. Contributors *UltiSnips-contributors*
|
|
|
|
The primary developer of UltiSnips is SirVer (Holger Rapp). The following
|
|
individuals have contributed to UltiSnips (in chronological order):
|
|
|
|
JCEB - Jan Christoph Ebersbach
|
|
Michael Henry
|
|
Chris Chambers
|
|
Ryan Wooden
|
|
rupa - Rupa Deadwyler
|
|
Timo Schmiade
|
|
blueyed - Daniel Hahler
|
|
expelledboy - Anthony Jackson
|
|
allait - Alexey Bezhan
|
|
peacech - Charles Gunawan
|
|
guns - Sung Pae
|
|
shlomif - Shlomi Fish
|
|
pberndt - Phillip Berndt
|
|
thanatermesis-elive - Thanatermesis
|
|
rico-ambiescent - Rico Sta. Cruz
|
|
Cody Frazer
|
|
suy - Alejandro Exojo
|
|
grota - Giuseppe Rota
|
|
iiijjjii - Jim Karsten
|
|
fgalassi - Federico Galassi
|
|
lucapette
|
|
Psycojoker - Laurent Peuch
|
|
aschrab - Aaron Schrab
|
|
stardiviner - NagatoPain
|
|
skeept - Jorge Rodrigues
|
|
buztard
|
|
stephenmckinney - Steve McKinney
|
|
Pedro Algarvio - s0undt3ch
|
|
Eric Van Dewoestine - ervandew
|
|
Matt Patterson - fidothe
|
|
Mike Morearty - mmorearty
|
|
Stanislav Golovanov - JazzCore
|
|
David Briscoe - DavidBriscoe
|
|
Keith Welch - paralogiki
|
|
Zhao Cai - zhaocai
|
|
John Szakmeister - jszakmeister
|
|
Jonas Diemer - diemer
|
|
Romain Giot - rgiot
|
|
Sergey Alexandrov - taketwo
|
|
Brian Mock - saikobee
|
|
Gernot Höflechner - LFDM
|
|
Marcelo D Montu - mMontu
|
|
Karl Yngve Lervåg - lervag
|
|
Pedro Ferrari - petobens
|
|
|
|
Thank you for your support.
|
|
|
|
vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl:
|