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Emmet 2 for Sublime Text editor

This is the next version of Emmet plugin with greatly improved developer experience and new features. Read below for more details. Plugin is currently in beta stage and may contain bugs.

Emmet is a web-developer’s toolkit for boosting HTML & CSS code writing.

With Emmet, you can type expressions (abbreviations) similar to CSS selectors and convert them into code fragment with a single keystroke. For example, this abbreviation:

ul#nav>li.item$*4>a{Item $}

...can be expanded into:

<ul id="nav">
    <li class="item1"><a href="">Item 1</a></li>
    <li class="item2"><a href="">Item 2</a></li>
    <li class="item3"><a href="">Item 3</a></li>
    <li class="item4"><a href="">Item 4</a></li>
</ul>

Features

Read more about Emmet features

Installation

  1. From Command Palette, run Package Control: Install Package command.
  2. In opened packages list, find Emmet package and install it

If you’re unable to find Emmet package on last step or installed package doesn’t work as expected, restart Sublime Text and try again

Expanding abbreviation

If you used previous version of Emmet plugin, you already know how to expand abbreviations: type something like ul>li.items*4 and hit <kbd>Tab</kbd> or <kbd>Ctrl-E</kbd>. While this approach generally works, it has lots of downsides:

In this plugin, abbreviation expander acts as autocomplete provider and automatically captures abbreviation as you type.

When you start typing in Emmet-supported context (HTML, CSS, Slim etc.) Emmet detects if you’re typing something similar to abbreviation and adds underline which indicates captured abbreviation. When captured abbreviation becomes complex (e.g. contains attributes or multiple elements), you’ll see a preview of expanded abbreviation every time caret is inside it. Hit <kbd>Tab</kbd>key inside captured abbreviation to expand it, hit <kbd>Esc</kbd> to remove mark from abbreviation so you can use <kbd>Tab</kbd> for expanding native ST snippets or insert tab character.

Emmet abbreviation example

If you already have an abbreviation in document and you want to expand it, move caret to the end of abbreviation and invoke autocomplete (<kbd>Ctrl+Space</kbd> by default) to capture abbreviation:

Emmet abbreviation example

JSX support

Make sure your document syntax is set to JSX, not JavaScript

Writing Emmet abbreviations in JSX is a bit tricky: in most cases you’d expect Tab key to expand native Sublime Text snippets and use Emmet for specific context only. So a default abbreviation capturing for every variable or snippet would annoy you.

To solve this problem, Emmet uses prefixed abbreviations in JSX: it will capture and expand abbreviation only if it’s prefixed with a specific symbol(s). By default, it’s a < character:

Emmet abbreviation example

Emmet detects camel-cased module notation in JSX: Foo.Bar will be expanded as <Foo.Bar></Foo.Bar> instead of <Foo className="Bar"></Foo>. Expression attributes are supported as well: div[class={getClass('foo')}].

CSS support

In CSS, Sublime Text uses slightly different autocomplete behavior by default: it displays completions by default and doesn’t re-populate completions list as you type further, which prevents Emmet from building proper dynamic completion. To overcome this issue, Emmet displays abbreviation preview right after caret as phantom:

Emmet abbreviation example

If you don’t like inline preview for CSS, you can disable it for CSS only:

In Emmet 2, CSS abbreviations are enhanced with dynamic color snippets: you can type, for example, #f.5 to quickly get rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.5).

Disable abbreviation capturing

To fine tune automatic abbreviation capturing, go to Preferences > Package Settings > Emmet > Settings menu item and update auto_mark option:

For example, if you want abbreviation capturing for HTML and disable it for CSS, set "auto_mark": "markup". You can also apply the same values for abbreviation_preview option to enable/disable interactive previews completely or for specific syntaxes only.

With abbreviation capturing disabled, you have several options to expand abbreviations manually:

// Put this code snippet into your .sublime-keymap file
// and modify `keys` value with desired shortcut
{
    "keys": ["ctrl+e"],
    "command": "emmet_expand_abbreviation"
}

Emmet abbreviation mode example

It is recommended to add keyboard shortcut for this action as well:

// Put this code snippet into your .sublime-keymap file
// and modify `keys` value with desired shortcut
{
    "keys": ["ctrl+."],
    "command": "emmet_enter_abbreviation"
}

Tag preview

Another new feature of Emmet 2 is inline preview of opening tag. When you move caret inside name of closing tag and its matching open tag is not visible on screen, you’ll see an inline tag preview:

Tag preview

Click on this preview will jump to open tag.

This option is disable by default. To enable it, go to Preferences > Package Settings > Emmet > Settings and set tag_preview option to true.

Adding custom Emmet snippets

To add new Emmet snippets or modify existing ones, tweak core Emmet preferences etc., go to Preferences > Package Settings > Emmet > Settings and modify config key.

You can configure snippets/preferences globally or per syntax. Emmet understands two types of abbreviations: markup (used for markup syntaxes like HTML, Pug, JSX etc.) and stylesheet (for CSS, Sass, Less, etc.). In order to add or modify snippets globally, you should use one of these keys in config section. If you want to set snippets for specific syntax only (for example, only for JSX or HTML), you should use syntax name as a key. Here’s an example config:

{
    "config": {
        // Use "markup" key to specify global snippets/options for all markup
        // syntaxes like HTML, XML, JSX, Pug
        "markup": {
            // Snippets are just aliases for Emmet abbreviations
            // Check out default snippets:
            // https://github.com/emmetio/py-emmet/blob/master/emmet/snippets/html.py
            "snippets": {
                "foo": "ul.foo>li.foo-item*4"
            },

            // Add options to fine-tune Emmet,see all available options here:
            // https://github.com/emmetio/emmet/blob/master/src/config.ts#L79
            "options": {
                "output.tagCase": "upper"
            }
        },

        // Configure snippets/options for HTML syntax only.
        // For a list of supported syntaxes, check out keys of `syntax_scopes`
        // dictionary of `Emmet.sublime-settings`
        "html": {
            "snippets": {
                "myhtml": "main.my-html>section"
            }
        },

        // Use "stylesheet" key to configure all stylesheet syntaxes like CSS, SCSS,
        // Sass etc.
        "stylesheet": {
            // Stylesheet snippets are either aliases to CSS properties with
            // optional values or any arbitrary text.
            // Check out default snippets:
            // https://github.com/emmetio/py-emmet/blob/master/emmet/snippets/css.py
            "snippets": {
                "foo": "foo-bar"
            },

            // You can also set options here:
            // https://github.com/emmetio/emmet/blob/master/src/config.ts#L79
            "options": {
                "stylesheet.shortHex": false
            }
        },

        // Configure snippets/options for CSS syntax only.
        // For a list of supported syntaxes, check out keys of `syntax_scopes`
        // dictionary of `Emmet.sublime-settings`
        "css": {
            "snippets": {
                "prop": "some-prop:${value}"
            }
        }
    }
}

More actions

All the rest actions like Wrap with Abbreviation, Balance, Select Item etc. are also supported but doesn’t have default key bindings. You should either invoke these actions via Command Palette or create your own keyboard shortcuts (see Default.sublime-commands file for list of available actions).

A convenient way to add key bindings for Emmet commands is to go to Preferences > Package Settings > Emmet > Key Bindings menu and copy required sample bindings from the left side to the right without comments.

In future, Emmet for Sublime Text plugin will provide convenient UI for fine-tuning Emmet options and key bindings.

FAQ about migration from v1

Here are some most frequently asked questions and issues users came up with after updating to Emmet v2:

All my keyboard shortcuts gone/nothing works!

Emmet comes with lots of actions like Wrap with Abbreviation, Balance, Select Item etc. In v1, all these actions had default key bindings. And some of these actions override default ST actions like Go To End of Line (<kbd>Ctrl+E</kbd>) or actions from default packages. Unfortunately, ST doesn’t provide any means to unbind key bindings coming from packages so it became a real problem for users to properly restore editor behavior.

In Emmet 2, all key bindings are disabled by default so you have to add them manually. But don’t worry, you have to just uncomment them:

<kbd>Tab</kbd> key doesn’t work anymore

Most likely, you’ve updated <kbd>Tab</kbd> key handler for expand_abbreviation_by_tab action from Emmet v1 in your key bindings file: simply remove it, it no longer valid.

I don’t like new behavior with abbreviation capturing, I’d like to expand with <kbd>Tab</kbd> as earlier

You can get almost the same abbreviation expansion behavior as in v1:

{
    "keys": ["tab"],
    "command": "emmet_expand_abbreviation",
    "args": { "tab": true },
    "context": [
        { "key": "emmet_capture_abbreviation" },
        { "key": "selection_empty" },
        { "key": "has_next_field", "operand": false },
        { "key": "auto_complete_visible", "operand": false },
        { "key": "selector", "operand": "source.css, source.sass, source.less, source.scss, source.stylus, source.postcss, source.jade, text.jade, source.pug, text.pug, text.slim, text.xml, text.html - source, text.haml, text.scala.html, source string" }
    ]
}

Note that old behavior has lots of downsides: you won‘t be able to expand native ST snippets and use <kbd>Tab</kbd> key to insert indentation after word.

Development

In order to work with plugin source code, don’t forget to install py-emmet dependency. After checking out source code, go to repo folder and run

pip install -r requirements.txt -t .