YASnippet is a template system for Emacs. It allows you to type an abbreviation and automatically expand it into function templates. Bundled language templates include: C, C++, C#, Perl, Python, Ruby, SQL, LaTeX, HTML, CSS and more. The snippet syntax is inspired from TextMate's syntax, you can even import most TextMate templates to YASnippet. Watch a demo on YouTube or download a higher resolution version.
Clone this repository somewhere
$ cd ~/.emacs.d/plugins
$ git clone https://github.com/capitaomorte/yasnippet
Add the following in your .emacs
file:
(add-to-list 'load-path
"~/.emacs.d/plugins/yasnippet")
(require 'yasnippet)
(yas-global-mode 1)
Add your own snippets to ~/.emacs.d/snippets
by placing files there or invoking yas-new-snippet
.
In a recent emacs M-x list-packages
is the recommended way to list and install packages.
MELPA keeps a very recent snapshot of YASnippet, see http://melpa.milkbox.net/#installing.
El-get is a nice way to get the most recent version, too. See https://github.com/dimitri/el-get for instructions. Be sure to install the "master" branch since the 3.x series still use the old googlecode code, base. Consider using this "local" recipe.
(push '(:name yasnippet
:website "https://github.com/capitaomorte/yasnippet.git"
:description "YASnippet is a template system for Emacs."
:type github
:pkgname "capitaomorte/yasnippet"
:features "yasnippet"
:compile "yasnippet.el")
el-get-sources)
To use YASnippet as a non-global minor mode, replace (yas-global-mode 1)
with
(yas-reload-all)
to load the snippet tables. Then add a call to
(yas-minor-mode)
to the major-modes where you to enable YASnippet.
(add-hook 'prog-mode-hook
'(lambda ()
(yas-minor-mode)))
Please do not open pull requests or ask me to add snippets to YASnippet.
The bundled collection under /snippets
is considered frozen: I
will not add more snippets to it.
You can point yas-snippet-dirs
to good snippet collections out
there. If you have created snippets for a mode, or multiple modes,
consider creating a repository to host them, then tell users that it
should be added like this to yas-snippet-dirs
:
(setq yas-snippet-dirs
'("~/.emacs.d/snippets" ;; personal snippets
"/path/to/some/collection/" ;; just some foo-mode snippets
"/path/to/some/othercollection/" ;; some more foo-mode and a complete baz-mode
"/path/to/yasnippet/snippets" ;; the default collection
))
(yas-global-mode 1) ;; or M-x yas-reload-all if you've started YASnippet already.
There is a tool extras/textmate-import.rb
than can import many
actual TextMate snippets. These can be quite complex so the
extras/imported/*-mode/.yas-setup.el
files help it with the more
difficult importation.
I'm focusing on developing textmate-import.rb
tool and some
yas-setup.el
files. In the future /snippets
snippets will be
deprecated and might be replaced with extras/imported
.
To start using drnic's snippets for rails
development, follow this example. It will convert ruby
, rails
and
html
bundles from github repositories. The importation will be
guided by the .yas-setup.el
files.
After cloning this repository to ~/.emacs.d/plugins/yasnippet
cd ~/.emacs.d/plugins/yasnippet
git submodule init
git submodule update
gem install plist trollop
rake convert_bundles # will convert ruby, rails and html bundles
Then, in your .emacs
file
(add-to-list 'load-path
"~/.emacs.d/plugins/yasnippet")
(require 'yasnippet)
(setq yas-snippet-dirs '("~/.emacs.d/snippets" "~/.emacs.d/plugins/yasnippet/extras/imported"))
(yas-global-mode 1)
Open some rails file (model, app, etc) and start using the textmate
snippets. Note that in the example above we have abandoned the
default snippet collection on ~/.emacs.d/plugins/yasnippet/snippets
Please refer to the comprehensive (albeit slightly outdated) documentation for full customization and support. If you find a bug, please report it on the GitHub issue tracker. (please do not submit new issues to the old googlecode tracker)
If you think have found a bug, please report it clearly. Yasnippet does have (lots of) bugs and your reports are very valuable. Here's a great example of a bug report. It has everything needed for a sucessfull analysis and speedy resolution:
Before reporting try to reproduce the bug without your usual
.emacs
(or whatever startup file you use). Do so either by starting
emacs from the command line with the -Q
switch, or by temporarily
moving away your .emacs
and creating a new smaller one just for
reproducing the bug. Paste that file in your bug report. Paste any sequence
of relevant shell commands before you launch Emacs.
Then, describe steps taken to reproduce from an end-user perspective. Try to be as unambiguous as possible.
Also, don't forget to state the Emacs version (use M-x emacs-version
) and
the yasnippet version you are using (if using the latest from github,
do git log -1
in the dir).
Any more info is welcome, but don't just paste a backtrace or an error message string you got. I'm not saying your analysis might not be useful but following the instructions above immediately gives me a clear picture of what is happening.
There is also a YASnippet google group. I will keep the group open for reference and for discussion among users, unfortunately I can't guarantee a timely response, so maybe creating a github issue clearly marking your intent (user support/bug/feature request).
Finally, thank you very much for using YASnippet!