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Save tylermcginnis/0089ee0942d44e615098f83b01e1ce4a to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
{ | |
"auto_complete_commit_on_tab": true, | |
"color_scheme": "Packages/Oceanic Next Color Scheme/Oceanic Next.tmTheme", | |
"draw_white_space": "all", | |
"font_face": "Fira Mono", | |
"font_size": 20, | |
"tab_size": 2, | |
"theme": "Brogrammer.sublime-theme", | |
"translate_tabs_to_spaces": true, | |
"trim_automatic_white_space": true, | |
"trim_trailing_white_space_on_save": true | |
} |
@botmaster @JimmyLv and anyone else using Intellij, you can use Live Templates to achieve the same thing as Sublime's snippets.
Info here:
https://blog.jetbrains.com/webstorm/2018/01/using-and-creating-code-snippets
and all available variables (including filename and filename without extension) here:
https://www.jetbrains.com/help/idea/live-template-variables.html
As an example, you can set up a Live Template for a React Native Functional Component by going to Preferences > Editor > Live Templates and creating a new Template Group (I called mine React Native) and then a new Live Template in that group. The abbreviation is rnccf
, description is whatever you want, and the "Template text" is as follows:
import { View, Text } from 'react-native'
$ComponentName$.propTypes = {
}
export default function $ComponentName$ (props) {
return (
<View>
<Text>
$ComponentName$
</Text>
</View>
)
}
$ComponentName$
creates a variable, which you edit by clicking "Edit variables". Make the "Expression" for this variable fileNameWithoutExtension()
, and then define the available contexts by clicking "Define" below the template text. It's a similar process for creating the other snippets.
Update:
The gist above contains the vimified version of Tylers snippets, but as I go through the course, I find myself making more snippets. if you're interested, take a look at my dotfiles/javascript.snippets. I'll leave the above gist as-is