building shortcut for 'grunt test' inside sublime - sublimetext2

How would I go about having a shortcut / macro to run 'grunt test' from within sublime/ Preferably with just 1 keystroke. Best would be to see the output in the sublime console. Any plugin for this?

You don't need plugin.
Sublime Text 2 has extensive, extensible, build system:
http://docs.sublimetext.info/en/latest/file_processing/build_systems.html
Create your build configuration for grunt test
Trigger it with a hotkey

Related

How to config PSR coding standards in Sublime Text2 for PHP

I have installed Sublime Text2. I want auto formatting php code to PSR Standards. Can anyone please help me how to configure in Sublime Text2
I just yesterday installed one plugin that you could use for PSR-1 and PSR-2.
Link that I found for this is:
sublimetext-codeformatter
Install it in Sublime Text 3 via console and after that you can use from Command Pallete [CTRL + P windows (default keyboard shortcut)] and type format and choose Codeformatter: Format code and this will format your code. You can see also the options for PHP and adapt them as you want, see 2nd image.
Default PHP settings:
I also adjusted my own keyboard shortcut in Preferences -> Keybindings
{ "keys": ["ctrl+alt+l"], "command": "code_formatter"}
If you need something more, tag me below in comments and I'll gladly reply back.
I believe that to achive what you are looking for, there are several steps included:
1) Download and install Sublime PHPCS
2) Configure according php packages you intend to use (Available: PHP_CodeSniffer, PHP Mess Detector, PHP CS Fixer, Scheck and PHP Code Beautifier)
3) Lastly you will need to configure the plugin inside of sublime text.
According to this link here, you can configure it to comply with PSR-2 standard.
Hope this helps!

ExtendScript plugin for Webstorm or PhPstorm?

when scripting for after effects I often use ExtendScript.
There is an extendscript package available for sublime text out there.
https://sublime.wbond.net/packages/ExtendScript
(this makes it possible to run your script directly from sublime text into after effects)
I was wondering if there is also something like this out there for any JetBrains IDEs (like WebStorm or PhpStorm etc.). I do know it has several plugins in it, but i don't know if there was ever one made for Expendscript like the one for sublime text.
I'm not aware of any... Please see http://devnet.jetbrains.com/message/5496889#5496889 for some hints
To be able to run adobe scripts from WebStorm, you can use external tools (Settings/External tools):
create a new external tool
specify a full path to Adobe tool capable of executing .jsx ("C:\Program Files (x86)\Adobe\Adobe Photoshop CS5\Photoshop.exe", for example) as a 'Program'
add $FileName$ as parameters
set a working directory to $FileDir$
make sure to check Show in/Project views and Editor menu to be able to run your tool from file right-click menu in Project view/Editor
then you'll be able to run your tool from a right-click menu of your .jsx file - the file will be passed to Photoshop as an argument

How to edit Sublime Text 3 Soda Theme

I installed the Soda Theme on Sublime Text 3 on OSX and I was wondering where are the actual files and folder to the theme that way I could look at the theme file and make my own edits to it, along with I would like to adjust a few of the images used in the theme.
On the Git documents it says if you are to manually install Soda on Sublime you place the soda folder in the package directory, although when I install Soda via Control Package I don't see the Soda theme in package directory.
Unless explicitly designated to not use it, most packages for Sublime Text 3 use the .sublime-package format (essentially a zip file). These packages are stored one directory up from the Packages folder, in Installed Packages. If you want to work with them, I highly recommend getting the PackageResourceViewer plugin by #skuroda. Install it via Package Control.
Once installed, open the command palette with ⌘⇧P and type prv to get the PackageResourceViewer options. Choose Extract Package, navigate down to Theme - Soda, hit Enter, and you're all set - the directory Packages/Theme - Soda should now exist with all the files from the Github repo in it. The .sublime-theme files will probably be the ones you're most interested in for now.
Have fun!
This answer is similar to the accepted solution, but with little more steps if it is not working out of the box. This might help someone if they are stuck with an issue which I have described in one of the below steps.
install PackageResourceViewer using Package Control
Go to Preferences->Package Settings->PackageResourceViewer->Setting-User. copy paste the following 3 lines,save and close it.
{
"single_command": false
}
press Ctrl+shift+p to open Package Control and select PackageResourceViewer: Edit Package Resource from the list. Find the package you want to edit and click on it. In my case, I want to edit a theme which is installed via ColorSublime Package, So I selected that theme.
Now you will see that the selected package file opened in the sublime editor itself. Edit it as you want and save it and close it. The changes should reflect in sublime editor. In my case, since I changed the theme I need reload it. So I continued with the following steps too.
go to view menu select 'Show Console' and run following command to reset the theme.
view.settings().erase("color_scheme")
open Preferences->Settings and delete the "color_scheme" attribute and its value from the settings file and close it. Again select the color theme from Preferences->Color scheme. Now you should able to see the changes reflected which you made in the theme package.
Hope this helps!
You can do it as follows.
Extract Soda theme from the Sublime Text 2 ~/Library/Application Support/Sublime Text 2/Packages/Color Scheme - Default folder
In Sublime Text 3, Select Sublime Text / Preferences / Browse Packages ...
Create a folder adjacent to the Users folder called THEMES.
Drop all themes you want from Sublime Text 2 (including Soda theme or any other themes) from the folder ~/Library/Application Support/Sublime Text 2/Packages/Color Scheme - Default into your ~/Library/Application Support/Sublime Text 3/Packages/THEMES folder from Sublime Text 3.
Edit the XML in the theme you want to use.
Back in Sublime Text 3, select Sublime Text / Color Schemes / THEMES / YourTheme.tmTheme to use it.

SublimeText - Few commands missing from command palette

I was trying some plugins on my Sublime Text yesterday and today I noticed that some commands were missing form my command palette window, namely:
New file into view (Not "new view into file", that one is still there)
Open in Browser as Testing Server(maybe the word "server" here is wrong)
Open in Browser as Development Server(maybe the word "server" here is wrong)
These three were really helpful to me, How can i get them back?
sublime text menu is a json PATH_TO_SUBLIME\Data\Packages\Default\Main.sublime-menu you can edit it or replace
These commands are added by a package called SideBarEnhancements. Install this package and you will get these commands back.
SideBarEnhancements on GitHub

Sweave syntax highlighting for Sublime Text

Currently Sublime Text 2 with installed LaTeXTools bundle stumbles over Sweave/knitr code blocks. How can I tell ST to either ignore everything of the form
<<arguments here>>=
#
or, even better, to treat it as R source code?
The Sweave Textmate bundle (or at least the essential parts) will also work with Sublime Text 2. Just download the bundle from https://github.com/textmate/sweave.tmbundle and move it to the Packages directory.
There's now the SublimeKnitr bundle that's made specifically made for Sublime Text. Install from GitHub source or via Package Control.