Set settings local to a single buffer. A more granular approach to settings
than the per file type .sublime-settings
files.
Inspired in Vim's modelines feature.
Download and install SublimeModelines.
See the installation instructions for .sublime-package
s.
Buffers will be scanned .on_load()
for modelines and settings will be set
accordingly. Settings will apply only to the buffer declaring them.
Modelines must be declared at the top or the bottom of source code files with one of the following syntaxes:
# sublime: option_name value # sublime: option_name value; another_option value; third_option value
Note: #
is the default comment character. Use the corresponding
single-line comment character for your language. When there isn't a concept of
comment, the default comment character must be used.
SublimeModelines finds the appropriate single-line comment character by inspecting
the shellVariables
preference, which must be defined in a .tmPreferences
file. To see an example of how this is done, open Packages/Python/Miscellaneous.tmPreferences
.
Many packages giving support for programming languages already include this, but
you might need to create a .tmPreferences
file for the language you're working
with if you want SublimeModelines to be available.
If the option's value contains a semicolon (;
), make sure it isn't followed
by a blank space. Otherwise it will be interpreted as a multioption separator.
For some common cases, no directly settable option exists (for example, a setting to specify a syntax). For such cases, Sublime Modelines provides non-standard accessors as a stop-gap solution.
x_syntax Packages/Foo/Foo.tmLanguage
Sets the syntax to the specified .tmLanguage file.