open-in-editor2 v2.2.1
NPM package to open a file in editor.
Supported editors:
- Sublime Text
- Atom Editor
- Visual Studio Code
- WebStorm
- PhpStorm
- IDEA 14 Community Edition
- Vim
- Emacs
- Visual Studio
You also can use any other editor that is able to open files from command line.
Installation
npm install open-in-editorUsage
First of all you should create an interface with your settings.
var openInEditor = require('open-in-editor');
var editor = openInEditor.configure({
// options
}, function(err) {
console.error('Something went wrong: ' + err);
});Resulting object has a single method open. This method runs terminal command that opens an editor. Result of this method is a promise:
editor.open('path/to/file.js:3:10')
.then(function() {
console.log('Success!');
}, function(err) {
console.error('Something went wrong: ' + err);
});API
openInEditor.configure([options][, failCallback]);Arguments:
options– optional is used to set up a command to launch an editor. If no options set it will try to get the command from environmentfailCallback– optional function that is called when something's wrong with editor setup.
If editor setup was successful configure method returns an interface with single method open. The method accepts file reference with the following format: filename[:line[:column]], where line and column tell the editor where to place cursor when file is opened.
Options
editor
Type: String or null
Values: 'sublime', 'atom', 'code', 'webstorm', 'phpstorm', 'idea14ce', 'vim', 'emacs', 'visualstudio'
Default: null
Editor to open a file. Once value is set, we try to detect a command to launch an editor.
Supported editors:
sublime– Sublime Textatom– Atom Editorcode– Visual Studio Codewebstorm– WebStormphpstorm- PhpStormidea14ce– IDEA 14 CEvim– Vim (via Terminal, Mac OS only)emacs– Emacs (via Terminal, Mac OS only)visualstudio– Visual Studio
cmd
Type: String or null
Default: null
Command to launch an editor.
var openInEditor = require('open-in-editor');
var editor = openInEditor.configure({
cmd: '/path/to/editor/app'
});If editor option is also set, an editor settings are using as default settings.
var openInEditor = require('open-in-editor');
var editor = openInEditor.configure({
editor: 'code',
cmd: '/path/to/editor/app' // will be called as '/path/to/editor/app -r -g {filename}:{line}:{column}'
});pattern
Type: String or null
Default: null
Option to specify arguments for a command. Pattern can contain placeholders to be replaced by actual values. Supported placeholders: filename, line and column.
var openInEditor = require('open-in-editor');
var editor = openInEditor.configure({
cmd: 'code',
pattern: '-r -g {filename}:{line}:{column}'
});If there's no {filename} placeholder in the command then {filename}:{line}:{column} is appended. That way previous example can be simplified:
var openInEditor = require('open-in-editor');
var editor = openInEditor.configure({
cmd: 'code',
pattern: '-r -g' // the same as '-r -g {filename}:{line}:{column}'
});line
Type: Number
Default: 1
Defines the number of the first line in the editor. Usually it's 1, but you can set it to 0.
column
Type: Number
Default: 1
Defines the number of the first column in the editor. Usually it's 1, but you can set it to 0.
Environment
If no editor or cmd option is specified, we try to get the command to launch an editor using environment settings. Following values can be used (in descending priority):
process.env.OPEN_FILEprocess.env.VISUALprocess.env.EDITOR
First value found is used. If it's process.env.VISUAL or process.env.EDITOR, it's used directly as cmd option. But process.env.OPEN_FILE is different: if value is a valid for editor option, it's used for it, otherwise it's used as a value for cmd option.
You can set env settings per command:
OPEN_FILE=atom oe path/to/file.js:4:15
OPEN_FILE="code -r -g" node script.jsCLI
Package could be installed globally.
npm install open-in-editor -gIn this case oe command will be available in terminal.
Usage:
oe [filename] [options]
Options:
--cmd <command> Command to open file
--debug Debug errors
-e, --editor <editor> Editor: atom, code, sublime, webstorm, phpstorm, idea14ce, vim, visualstudio, emacs
-f, --file <filename> File to open
-h, --help Output usage information
-p, --pattern <pattern> Filename pattern and args, i.e. something going after cmd
-v, --version Output the versionRelated projects
- express-open-in-editor –
Expressextension to open files from browser. - babel-plugin-source-wrapper –
Babelplugin that instruments source code to associate objects with location they defined in code base. - Component Inspector – developer tool to inspect components that can open component creation source location in editor. Has integrations for
React,Backboneand can be adopted for other frameworks.
License
MIT
6 years ago