I have block of code that I would like to move (2 space/1 tab) backwards. I know I can select the whole block and hit tab to move it forward but how do I move the whole block backwards (to the the left)?
There are two options:
Shift+ Tab
or
Ctrl+ [ (on mac this is ⌘+ [)
In Window Os Simple Press
Shift + Tab
To Remove Back Space Tab In sublime Text 2.
in linux,windows
It can be done with this command
Sublime Text,Vscode,Elipse,PhpStorm,Atom => shift+tab
Python IDLE => Ctrl + [
Related
I want to be able to edit every line of my data simultaneously, for instance put quotations in front of every line. I am wondering what the key combination is that will enable me to do this.
Four steps:
Select all the text: CTRL A
Activate multi-cursors: CTRL (or CMD on Mac) SHIFT L
Press the Home key to move all cursors to the front of the line
Press the " quote key to insert the quote.
Using the Home End and CTRL + left | right arrow keys is handy when managing multiple cursors.
On a mac, you can highlight the lines you wish to edit and use CMDShiftL, or ctrlShiftL on Windows.
On Mac
cmd+A (Select all)
cmd+shift+L (Split selection into lines)
shift+2 (Surround selection with quotes)
esc (Escape)
On Windows
CTRL+A (Select all Data)
CTRL+Shift+L (Cursor will appear on each line)
Shift+ (right or left key) (move the cursor left or right)
Press ESC to remove the focus.
In case if you want to put cursor at every string as currently selected, use Find All shortcut:
Windows/Linux: Alt+F3
Mac: ⌃+⌘+G
All Multiple Selection shortcuts
I found "Select Word at Caret" in the Edit menu. Is there a way to do similar, but select the entire line?
If you have nothing selected, and press ⌘ + C, PhpStorm will automatically copy the line at the caret. So basically, you don't need the 'Select Line at Caret' action.
I found "Select Line at Caret" in Preferences under "Keymap". (And associated it with ⌘-L.)
If you are using phpstorm 9 you can press couple of times ctrl + w to select the current line. Also it has some other benefits. Check out Extending selection at https://www.jetbrains.com/phpstorm/help/selecting-text-in-the-editor.html for more details
I am finding I often will multi-select a bunch of single points (ctrl+click on the point) in Sublime Text 2, get to the end of the items I want to multi-select and then discover one in the middle of them all that should not have been selected.
I then have to cancel the multi-select (esc key) and start my selection all over.
Is there a way to deselect a single multi-select point? I looked all over the net and experimented with the traditional opposite items such as ctrl+shift+click on the point I want to deselect. No joy.
Thanks in advance for your help!
Try this one:
alt + Middle Mouse Button
this feature/shortcut is called subtract from selection.
In OSX ⌘+opt+shift+ left click removes an added multi-cursor.
On Linux, if you are using a touchpad, try using: Alt + Shift + Right-Click.
If you are on OSX, you need to disable drag_text.
Edit your user preferences, i.e. super + , and add this:
"drag_text": false
Otherwise, you can select just like before - ctrl + click (command + click), and to deselect an instance you use alt + click (command + shift + click).
To deselect any text region (this way also deselects any included cursor point(s)):
On Windows
Alt+Shift+Right_Mouse_Button (Drag-Select what you need to deselect)
OR: Alt+Middle_Mouse_Button (Drag-Select what you need to deselect)
On OSX
Command+Shift+Option+Left_Mouse_Button (Drag-Select what you need to deselect)
OR: Command+Shift+Middle_Mouse_Button (Drag-Select what you need to deselect)
This works on SublimeText 2/3.
In case you want to deselect a single cursor point (not a region), you can do the same and drag-select any region that includes that cursor point. [Example: My Wor[Cursor]d. To deselect the cursor you can drag-select on: r[Cursor]d (or any region including the cursor) and it will automatically deselect the cursor point.]
Source: Column Selection
Is there any plugin or shortcut to hide all except code section in sublime text 2?
I need to fold all except section at a time , Not fold one section at a time.
Thanks~
If you'll hover with the mouse over the line numbers you'll see arrows - clicking on any of them will fold/collapse the code
If you want to collapse/expand all - you can do so by going to edit->code folding and choose "fold all" or "unfold all":
In addition to the other answers it is also possible to fold based on level as well. So for example looking at the default key bindings for fold.
Searching for fold key bindings.
So for example a foldall, or folding level 1 would be to hold Ctrl followed by pressing the sequence k and then 1:
Or folding level 2 would be to hold Ctrl followed by pressing the sequence k and then 2:
Or unfolding all would be would be to hold Ctrl followed by pressing the sequence k and then 0 or in my defaults I also seem to have it bound to the letter j:
Warning.
Pressing Ctrl+k twice will remove a line or a count of lines.
But not really cause you can put them back one by one by Ctrl+u
One thing you can do is select the Except code bloc using a regular expression, for instance using except(.|\n)*?raise.* in your case. You can then select "Find all" in the search bar, then Edit->Code Folding -> Fold .
Windows shortcut : Ctrl-Shift-[
Mac shortcut: Cmd-Alt-[
All the Except bloc will then be collapsed.
I know this is an old question, but it still comes up high in search results and none of the answers quite do what the OP wanted.
select the code you don't want to be hidden
use "Selection" -> "Invert Selection" to select the code you do want to be hidden instead
use ctrl + shift + [ or Command + Option + ] to collapse the selection(s)
This will leave you with just the code you originally had selected visible.
Fold and UnFold function or class base only for MAC:
* Fold: command + K, command + 1
* UnFold: command + K, command + J
I have installed Sublime Text 2 in windows and I am trying to use the multiple cursors feature.
Firstly I highlight the selection I am looking for (three lines).
Then I can press CTRL + D to select each re-occurrence, or ALT + F3 to select all. There are four repeats in my situation.
I now want to move the cursors in the middle of the three lines and add some information, to be added to all occurrences.
As soon as I click in the selection, the multiple selection is gone? Is there something I am doing wrong, I am sure it is wrong but as the documentation is so weak I cannot find out how?
It's usually just easier to skip the mouse altogether--or it would be if Sublime didn't mess up multiselect when word wrapping. Here's the official documentation on using the keyboard and mouse for multiple selection. Since it's a bit spread out, I'll summarize it:
Where shortcuts are different in Sublime Text 3, I've made a note. For v3, I always test using the latest dev build; if you're using the beta build, your experience may be different.
If you lose your selection when switching tabs or windows (particularly on Linux), try using Ctrl + U to restore it.
Mouse
Windows/Linux
Building blocks:
Positive/negative:
Add to selection: Ctrl
Subtract from selection: Alt In early builds of v3, this didn't work for linear selection.
Selection type:
Linear selection: Left Click
Block selection: Middle Click or Shift + Right Click On Linux, middle click pastes instead by default.
Combine as you see fit. For example:
Add to selection: Ctrl + Left Click (and optionally drag)
Subtract from selection: Alt + Left Click This didn't work in early builds of v3.
Add block selection: Ctrl + Shift + Right Click (and drag)
Subtract block selection: Alt + Shift + Right Click (and drag)
Mac OS X
Building blocks:
Positive/negative:
Add to selection: ⌘
Subtract from selection: ⇧⌘ (only works with block selection in v3; presumably bug)
Selection type:
Linear selection: Left Click
Block selection: Middle Click or ⌥ + Left Click
Combine as you see fit. For example:
Add to selection: ⌘ + Left Click (and optionally drag)
Subtract from selection: ⇧⌘ + Left Click (and drag--this combination doesn't work in Sublime Text 3, but supposedly it works in 2)
Add block selection: ⌥⌘ + Left Click (and drag)
Subtract block selection: ⌥⇧⌘ + Left Click (and drag)
Keyboard
Windows
Return to single selection mode: Esc
Extend selection upward/downward at all carets: Ctrl + Alt + Up/Down
Extend selection leftward/rightward at all carets: Shift + Left/Right
Move all carets up/down/left/right, and clear selection: Up/Down/Left/Right
Undo the last selection motion: Ctrl + U
Add next occurrence of selected text to selection: Ctrl + D
Add all occurrences of the selected text to the selection: Alt + F3
Rotate between occurrences of selected text (single selection): Ctrl + F3 (reverse: Ctrl + Shift + F3)
Turn a single linear selection into a block selection, with a caret at the end of the selected text in each line: Ctrl + Shift + L
Linux
Return to single selection mode: Esc
Extend selection upward/downward at all carets: Alt + Up/Down Note that you may be able to hold Ctrl as well to get the same shortcuts as Windows, but Linux tends to use Ctrl + Alt combinations for global shortcuts.
Extend selection leftward/rightward at all carets: Shift + Left/Right
Move all carets up/down/left/right, and clear selection: Up/Down/Left/Right
Undo the last selection motion: Ctrl + U
Add next occurrence of selected text to selection: Ctrl + D
Add all occurrences of the selected text to the selection: Alt + F3
Rotate between occurrences of selected text (single selection): Ctrl + F3 (reverse: Ctrl + Shift + F3)
Turn a single linear selection into a block selection, with a caret at the end of the selected text in each line: Ctrl + Shift + L
Mac OS X
Return to single selection mode: ⎋ (that's the Mac symbol for Escape)
Extend selection upward/downward at all carets: ⌃⇧⇡, ⌃⇧⇣ (See note)
Extend selection leftward/rightward at all carets: ⇧⇠/⇧⇢
Move all carets up/down/left/right and clear selection: ⇠, ⇡, ⇣, ⇢
Undo the last selection motion: ⌘U
Add next occurrence of selected text to selection: ⌘D
Add all occurrences of the selected text to the selection: ⌃⌘G
Rotate between occurrences of selected text (single selection): ⌥⌘G (reverse: ⌥⇧⌘G)
Turn a single linear selection into a block selection, with a caret at the end of the selected text in each line: ⇧⌘L
Notes for Mac users
On Yosemite and El Capitan, ⌃⇧⇡ and ⌃⇧⇣ are system keyboard shortcuts by default. If you want them to work in Sublime Text, you will need to change them:
Open System Preferences.
Select the Shortcuts tab.
Select Mission Control in the left listbox.
Change the keyboard shortcuts for Mission Control and Application windows (or disable them). I use ⌃⌥⇡ and ⌃⌥⇣. They defaults are ⌃⇡ and ⌃⇣; adding ⌃ to those shortcuts triggers the same actions, but slows the animations.
In case you're not familiar with Mac's keyboard symbols:
⎋ is the escape key
⌃ is the control key
⌥ is the option key
⇧ is the shift key
⌘ is the command key
⇡ et al are the arrow keys, as depicted
In Sublime Text, after you select multiple regions of text, a click is considered a way to exit the multi-select mode. Move the cursor with the keyboard keys (arrows, Ctrl+arrows, etc.) instead, and you'll be fine
Try using Ctrl-click on the multiple places you want the cursors. Ctrl-D is for multiple incremental finds.
I find using vintage mode works really well with sublime multiselect.
My most used keys would be "w" for jumping a word, "^" and "$" to move to first/last character of the line. Combinations like "2dw" (delete the next two words after the cursor) make using multiselect really powerful.
This sounds obvious but has really sped up my workflow, especially when editing HTML.
Mac Users, let me save you the time:
Cmd+a: select the lines you want a cursor
Cmd+Shift+l: to create the cursor