A quick and simple way to run arbitrary shell commands in Sublime Text 2.
Mr. Turtlestein acts as a more flexible alternative to Sublime's build systems. Commands run in your project's directory:
And display their output just like Sublime's build systems:
Snippets are available for frequently used commands. All snippets with the
scope name source.shell
(source.dosbatch
for Windows users) can be used in
the prompt shown above. I have
some examples
you can take a look at to get an idea for this.
- Ctrl + Shift + C (Cmd + Shift + C): prompt for a shell command
- Ctrl + Alt + Shift + C (Cmd + Alt + Shift + C): launch a terminal in the window's directory
In your own Packages/User/Shell Turtlestein.sublime-commands
file you can
override the following settings:
surround_cmd
: A two-element array that specifies text to append before and after the command (e.g.["source ~/.profile && ", ""]
).exec_args
: The arguments that will be passed toExecCommand
. The same options that are available to build systems are available here, butfile_regex
,line_regex
,encoding
,env
, andpath
are the only options that make sense to use with this plugin. Arguments specified in thecmd_settings
(see below) will override these defaults.cmd_settings
: An array of configurations to use for commands that are executed. The first configuration to match the command being run will be used. The keys that each configuration should have are:cmd_regex
: A regex that must match the command for this configuration for this configuration to be used.exec_args
andsurround_cmd
override the settings described above for any matching command.
Q: Who the balls is Shell Turtlestein?
A: He was a pet turtle that died in some episode of Modern Family. That's about as high-brow as my references get. R.I.P. Shell :(
Q: What does "PAQ" stand for?
A: Possibly asked questions