parrotcode: Productivity Comes in Pretty Colors | |
Contents | Editor Plugins |
editor/README.pod - Productivity Comes in Pretty Colors
Included in this directory are some add-ins for making working on parrot (or in parrot) easier, for various popular editors. Mostly that means syntax-highlighting and automatic indenting. Read on to see what's available for your favorite editor. For a summary on what is available do cd editor && make help
Calling make vim-install
in the editor/ directory will install several files in ~/.vim.
All these files have the .vim extension.
pir.vim (generated from pir_vim.in),
pasm.vim,
and pmc.vim are syntax files; indent_pir.vim is an indent plugin; and filetype_parrot.vim is a filetype script that tells vim to associate the extensions .pir,
.pasm,
and .pmc with the right syntax.
The syntax files are installed to ~/.vim/syntax/; filetype_parrot.vim is installed to ~/.vim/ftdetect; indent_pir.vim is copied to ~/.vim/indent/pir.vim.
If you want indenting,
you should also place filetype indent on
somewhere in your ~/.vimrc.
There is a syntax file for the KDE editor Kate, but it is not built by default. Run:
make imc.kate
in editor/ to build it.
TODO: How do we install Kate syntax files?
In this directory is a parrot.el describing the c-mode and cperl-mode changes modifications required to edit the Parrot source code. To install the Parrot mode support copy parrot.el to a directory where Emacs looks for external packages and add the following to your ~/.emacs file:
(load "parrot")
Alternatively, if you're an active Parrot developer, you may wish to add this to your .emacs instead, to automatically track future changes:
(load-file "/<path-to-parrot>/editor/parrot.el")
Included here is an Emacs mode for editing pasm files, in pasm.el.
To install the pasm major mode copy pasm.el to a directory where Emacs looks for external packages and add the following to your ~/.emacs file:
(load "pasm")
To automatically associate .pasm files with this major mode add:
(add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist (cons "\\.pasm\\'" 'pasm-mode))
to your ~/.emacs or you can alternatively type M-x pasm-mode
for every file that you want to use the major mode in.
Additionally, you might want to add:
(add-hook 'pasm-mode-hook
(function (lambda ()
(setq indent-tabs-mode nil))))
to ~/.emacs as this seems to prevent the odd behavior that is noted when using tabs in the pasm mode.
There is a script here to automatically generate a TAGS file, which works with Vim and other editors that recognize ctags-format files. The tool "exuberant ctags" is required. Run
make tags
in the parrot root directory to build the tags file.
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