One has to go to Window -> Open project… in order for the editor to actually load the project config file, or use subl -project path/to/project.sublime-project. (Sublime has this concept of “projects” I don’t really like. These will go into a xxx.sublime-project file, where xxx is the name of your project (anything). Essentially holding the values described in “Configuration file”. That is, settings that describe paths to files, and lint and format config. Sublime project configurationįirst of all, we need a place where we can instruct Sublime (and installed packages) where to look for custom Deno settings. This is for making JSON files more “VS Code like” in the way that keys in various settings files can be autocompleted and validated. Schema validation/completions for your JSON and Sublime files. Convenience package for starting the Deno LSP server. There are packages for Typescript, CSS, Deno, JSON, Lua, Vue, etc. This is a base package, which is used by other language specific packages. Client implementation of the Language Server Protocol for Sublime Text. (I assume you have Package Control up and running.) Also, I want to try to have Sublime support import maps, the Deno config file, and format on save. “Ergonomic” as in “actually use Typescript features and not show any red compile errors for Deno specific code”. As a test to get a feel for the ecosystem, I’ve set out on a journey to make it more ergonomic to develop Deno code. I’ve recently switched back to Sublime Text as main editor, as described in a recent /mind post.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |