![]() For a list of other useful options and their description, follow the github link above. One of JD Isaacks’ masterpieces, GitGutter will make you love yourself for using Git with your projects as it displays small icons in the gutter area of Sublime, indicating whether a line has been inserted, modified or deleted. One of Will Bond’s (yeah, the same guy who made Package Control itself) best packages for ST, Alignment helps you write clean readable code – just select the lines that need aligning and do a Ctrl + Alt + A. The README.md on github provides a few basic usage examples. Great package for Sublime that makes documenting code a breeze. Unzip theme.zip & rm theme.zip & mv st-theme-freesia-master 'Theme - Freesia' not on github yet or your SSH keys are missing), you can do it the hard nasty ass h4xX0r way: cd ~/.config/sublime-text/Packages If for any sad reason you can’t do that (i.e. Quick installation thingy: cd ~/.config/sublime-text/Packages ![]() Of course, 99.9% of the credit and all the thanks go straight to Noel Cower, Dayle Rees and all the people they recursively thanked themselves. Well anyway, did some research and put together a little something: Void Theme + Tron Contrast Color Scheme. Install the Phoenix Theme and pick a nice color scheme – I’d go for Dark Blue, so Ctrl + Shift + P and look up the Phoenix Theme. Unfortunately, it seems that as of somewhere around August the 24th, the Phoenix Theme started breaking Sublime Text’s UI badly so a switch is in order (too bad, it really was a nice theme). This is where we copy Package Control.sublime-package, or alternatively try this code directly in the ST2 console (Ctrl + `).Ģ. The following part is sort of a humble guide that could be entitled 5 things you should do after installing Sublime Text. It will describe in a few steps how to get a bare minimum of extra awesomeness that this IDE deserves.įrom the Preferences menu, go to Browse Packages, go one folder up and enter Installed Packages. Also, there’s this super detailed and informative article written by Stuart Herbert who’s an awesome software engineer with early contributions to quite a few open-source projects, most notably Gentoo Linux and Generic NQS. Oh deer! Whatever happened to minimal writing… More to the point, Sublime Text is great – you can find tons of resources on the website including documentation for its Python based plugin API. So if you ever see me using something else, I must be doing embedded programming, using some dedicated IDE because of its painless debugging and actual microcontroller programming capabilities. Then of course, some years ago I tried Sublime Text and couldn’t let go since. I had to force myself into using other IDEs, mostly because of their particular features and my eagerness to get sh** done faster. While I have to admit there are some more powerful IDEs out there and that the people who use them are probably more skilled than I am, I prefer to stand my ground claiming that programming as an activity, should above everything be pleasant. ![]() I love it, everyone I know loves it, I wish it could have my babies and the only programmers I know that don’t love it are either gay or VIMmers. It's subtle but it's there.First of all, Sublime Text is one of those type of tools that make you wonder how life was even possible before of it. Even if it's identical it wasn't on purpose): Javascript, Ruby, Java, all others.Ĭomparison between this theme and Sublime Text'sĬomparison between default VSCode Monokai theme and Sublime Text's
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |