A plugin for Sublime Text 3 heavily inspired by AceJump for emacs.
AceJump allows you to move the cursor to any character to any place currently on screen. To clarify, you can jump between characters in all visible portions of currently open documents in any panes. Like it's emacs counterpart, AceJump for sublime features word (on the image below), character and line modes which make jumping even easier.
After selecting a mode, you type in a character (except in line mode, where you don't have to type in anything) and appropriate labels are displayed. Then all you need to do is press the key from the label and voila!
You can install AceJump from PackageControl by following the steps below:
- Open up the command palette and select
Package Control: Install Package
- Wait for the packages index to load and select
AceJump
You can install AceJump manually using git by running the following command within sublime packages directory (Preferences > Browse Packages):
$ git clone [email protected]:ice9js/ace-jump-sublime.git AceJump/
Or you can just copy the contents of this repository into Packages/AceJump
.
Goes to a word starting with the given character. This mode works only with alphanumeric characters. If you're interested in jumping to a special character, use character mode instead.
Ctrl/Super + Shift + ;
<head character>
<label>
No need to press enter after selecting a label!
Goes to an occurence of the given character.
Ctrl/Super + Shift + '
<character>
<label>
Labels all non-empty lines and lets you jump to one of them.
Ctrl/Super + Shift + .
<label>
Labels all words within the line where current cursor locate and lets you jump to one of them.
Ctrl/Super + Shift + ,
<label>
After triggering select mode, the next jump will select everything inbetween the current cursor position and the selected label. When select mode is triggered, the next jump is limited to the current file.
Alt+;
(Ctrl+;
for OS X)- perform a jump using word, character or line mode
After triggering multiple cursors mode, the next jump will add a new cursor to the view instead of moving the existing one. Again, when this mode is triggered, only jumps in the same file are available.
Alt+'
(Ctrl+'
for OS X)
In this mode, the cursor will jump behind the targeted instance. Unfortunetely, this mode cannot be paired with select or multiple cursors mode yet.
Alt+.
(Ctrl+.
for OS X)
In case there are more places to jump to than labels available, labels will be batched and you can cycle through them by simply pressing enter.
In order to access AceJump settings, go to Preferences > Package Settings > AceJump > Settings - User
.
Go to Preferences > Package Settings > AceJump > Key Bindings - User
.
You can then override the bindings for any of the following commands:
ace_jump_word
ace_jump_char
ace_jump_line
ace_jump_within_line
ace_jump_select
ace_jump_add_cursor
ace_jump_after
The commands accept an optional Boolean current_buffer_only
argument. When present and set to true
, AceJump only performs on the currently edited buffer.
You can override the labels
setting to provide your own set of labels to be used by AceJump.
You can also set the syntsx scope that's used for highlighting by overriding labels_scope
. The default scope is invalid
.
Ace jump is case sensitive by default. Case sensitivity can be toggled on and off by altering the search_case_sensitivity
setting.
By setting jump_behind_last_characters
to true
, AceJump will jump behind a character if it's the last character on a line, without the need to trigger jump after mode. This only works in character mode and is switched off by default.
It has been reported that the Select mode, Multi cursors mode and Jump after mode might not work using the specified keybinding.
As a workaround for that follow these steps:
- Start a regular search, e.g. word search (default keybinding: Ctrl+Shift+;).
- Before entering any character, activate the advanced mode (e.g. for Select mode use Alt+;).
- Now enter the character to lookup.
- Use the label to go to the corresponding location.