Domanda

Ci sono momenti nel testo sublime quando voglio rivelare il file corrente nella barra laterale e quindi navigare intorno alla struttura delle cartelle.

Può essere ottenuto utilizzando i comandi reveal_in_side_bar e focus_side_bar Tuttavia devono essere vincolati a due combinazioni di tasti separate quindi devo fare 2 combinazioni di tastiere per raggiungere il mio obiettivo quando idealmente mi piacerebbe solo uno (sono pigro).

C'è un modo per associare più comandi a una combinazione di tasti singoli?per esempio.qualcosa del genere:

{
  "keys": ["alt+shift+l"], 
  "commands": ["reveal_in_side_bar", "focus_side_bar"]
},
.

soluzione

Basato su @ Artem-Ivanyk's e @ d_rail's Answers

1) Strumenti → Nuovo plug-in

import sublime, sublime_plugin

class RevealInSideBarAndFocusCommand(sublime_plugin.WindowCommand):
    def run(self):
        self.window.run_command("reveal_in_side_bar")
        self.window.run_command("focus_side_bar")
.

Salva come rivelinsidebarandfocus.py

2) Testo sublime 2 → Preferenze → Binding tasti - Utente

Bind It to Collect:

{ "keys": ["alt+shift+l"], "command": "reveal_in_side_bar_and_focus" }
.

È stato utile?

Soluzione

Updating @Artem Ivanyk's answer. I do not know what changed in Sublime, but that solution did not work for me, but I got this to work:

import sublime, sublime_plugin

class RevealInSideBarAndFocusCommand(sublime_plugin.WindowCommand):
    def run(self):
        self.window.run_command("reveal_in_side_bar")
        self.window.run_command("focus_side_bar")

.

{ "keys": ["ctrl+shift+8"], "command": "reveal_in_side_bar_and_focus" }

Btw, I'm using Build 2220

Altri suggerimenti

Although the question is a year old, this might help people that are still looking for an answer.

Recently, a new package was developed by jisaacks, called Chain of command. It has the primary task to do exactly what you request, to chain several commands at once.

The package can be found here: https://github.com/jisaacks/ChainOfCommand

An example of the working can be found below.

Let's say you wanted a key binding to duplicate the current file. You could set this key binding:

{
  "keys": ["super+shift+option+d"], 
  "command": "chain", 
  "args": {
    "commands": [
      ["select_all"],
      ["copy"],
      ["new_file"],
      ["paste"],
      ["save"]
    ]
  }
}

This would select all the text, copy it, create a new file, paste the text, then open the save file dialog.

Source: https://sublime.wbond.net/packages/Chain%20of%20Command.

Stumbled upon similar problem. When trying to record macros, which involved „Save“ command, console threw at me „Unknown macros command save“ message. Worked my way around with elementary plugin.

1) Tools → New Plugin

import sublime, sublime_plugin

class MyChainedActionsCommand():
    def run(self):
        self.view.run_command("reveal_in_side_bar")
        self.view.run_command("focus_side_bar")

You need to use upper camel case notation for the class name. ST2 exposes this class for the command name with „Command“ suffix removed and the rest converted into the lowercase-underscore notation. I.e. in this example MyChainedActionsCommand could be run in sublime's console typing: view.run_command("my_chained_actions")

2) Sublime Text 2 → Preferences → Key Bindings — User

Bind it to shortcut:

{ "keys": ["alt+shift+l"], "command": "my_chained_actions" }

Heed commas.

Take a look at this gist.

I've been trying to implement this in a long time and found this by accident.

Don't forget to read the "documentation" provided. I kept trying to make this work, until I reallized I was not passing the "context" key.

You can create a macro to do this. For Sublime Text, macros are essentially just chained commands. You then create a keybinding for that macro. You can create a macro by using Tools > Record Macro, then executing your commands (beware that macros record keystrokes as well, so you'll want to use the commands from the menu bar to not cause conflicts), then Stop Recording, then Save Macro. After you save the macro, you can open it back up in Sublime Text to make sure that it recorded only what you want.

Building on Artem Ivanyk reply, here is a version of ChainedActions that works with arguments. It takes two arguments for actions and args. Both are lists and each command in the list gets executed with the corresponding arguments. This admittedly stupid example inserts two snippets: view.run_command("chained_actions", {"actions":["insert_snippet","insert_snippet"],"args":[{"contents": "($0)"},{"contents": "1($0)"}]})`

import sublime
import sublime_plugin

class ChainedActionsCommand(sublime_plugin.TextCommand):
    def run(self, edit, actions, args):
        for i, action in enumerate(actions):
            self.view.run_command(action, args[i])

I've tried to use the same command but I ended up with a bug that when the file's folder was already unfolded sublime moved my focus sidebar's top, where I can see the open files. To improve this behavior I've wrote a new plugin that ensures it'll behave as I want to, here it is https://github.com/miguelgraz/FocusFileOnSidebar

I am using Sublime text3 build - 3083. It solves the problem just by 'Reveal it in side bar', the focus comes automatically.

I have added a custom keyboard shortcut for 'Reveal in sidebar' by adding the following statement under Preferences->Key Bindings-User :

[
    { "keys": ["ctrl+shift+r"], "command": "reveal_in_side_bar"}
]

The option - 'Reveal in sidebar' was missing for image file types, since the context menu doesn't appear with the right click of the mouse. The custom keyboard shortcut comes handy in this situation.

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