Forks and/or PRs are welcome, I'm not the developer of this project.
A Sublime Text 3 plugin that displays a directory in a view, allowing easy file manipulation, loosely copied from emacs dired mode.
You can install via Sublime Package Control Or you can clone this repo into your Sublime Text 3/Packages
The plugin provides a dired
command which allows you to choose a directory to display. The
files in the directory are displayed in a list allowing them to be moved, renamed, or deleted.
There is no default binding for the dired command itself, but once in a dired view the following are available:
u
- up to parentn
- move to next filep
- move to previous fileD
- delete filesM
- move filesR
- rename filesr
- refreshm
- toggle markU
- unmark all filest
- toggle all marks*.
- mark by file extensionEnter
- open file/directoryCtrl/Alt/Cmd+Enter
- open file/directory in new view
If there are marked files, operations only affect those files. Otherwise files in selections or with cursors on them are affected. This works nicely with multiple cursors and selections.
The dired
command accepts the argument immediate
, which immediately displays a directory
without prompting. The directory displayed will be that of the current view or the first
project folder, or if neither of these are available, the user’s home directory.
This also allows the plugin to be used from the command line or integrated with a file browser etc., e.g.
subl --command 'dired {"immediate": true}' "/path/to/folder"
The rename command puts the view into "rename mode". The view is made editable so files can be renamed directly in the view using all of your Sublime Text tools: multiple cursors, search and replace, etc.
Use Ctrl+Enter
to commit your changes and Ctrl+Escape
to cancel them.
Rename compares the names before and after editing, so you must not add or remove lines.
If True, the default, pressing Enter on a directory uses the current view. If False, a new view is created.
If only one directory is selected, Cmd/Ctrl/Alt+Enter can be used to force a new view even when reuse_view is set.
Array of regular expressions matching filenames excluded from directory listing. Note that
regexps are written as strings, so escape sequences must be doubled, i.e. "\\."
for /\./
regexp.
By default empty, displaying all files. To hide unix dot files, you can use
{
"omit_patterns": "^\\."
}