Emmet

Emmet - Web开发人员的基本工具包。Emmet是许多流行的文本编辑器的插件,大大提高了HTML和CSS工作流程。(Emmet — the essential toolkit for web-developers. Emmet is a plugin for many popular text editors which greatly improves HTML & CSS workflow:)

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Emmet - Web开发人员的基本工具包。Emmet是许多流行的文本编辑器的插件,大大提高了HTML和CSS工作流程:

使用Emmet,您可以键入可以动态解析的类似CSS的表达式,并根据您在缩写中输入的内容生成输出。 为开发人员开发和优化了Emmet,其工作流程依赖于HTML /XML和CSS,但也可以与编程语言一起使用。
例如,这个缩写:
<code>ul#nav>li.item$*4>a{Item $}</code>

...可以扩展为:

<code><ul id="nav">    <li class="item1"><a href="">Item 1</a></li>    <li class="item2"><a href="">Item 2</a></li>    <li class="item3"><a href="">Item 3</a></li>    <li class="item4"><a href="">Item 4</a></li></ul></code>

Emmet 主要特性:

来自CSS的HTML -- 您已经知道如何使用Emmet缩写:其语法灵感来自CSS选择器。

动态片段 -- 每个缩写在运行时被转换:只是略微更改其名称以获得不同的结果。

超快速编码 -- 使用Emmet,您可以快速编写一堆代码,使用新标签封装代码,快速遍历并选择重要的代码部分等等!

可定制 -- 用户可以轻松地添加新的片段,并使用少量的json文件微调Emmet体验。

平台新工具 -- 挖掘emmet源代码并重新使用其模块来创建您自己独特的操作。

高度便携 -- Emmet是用纯JavaScript编写的,可以在不同的平台上使用:Web浏览器,Node.js,Microsoft WSH和Mozilla Rhino。

概覽

名稱與所有者emmetio/emmet
主編程語言TypeScript
編程語言JavaScript (語言數: 2)
平台
許可證MIT License
發布數107
最新版本名稱emmet@2.4.7 (發布於 2024-03-13 16:49:50)
第一版名稱v0.6 (發布於 )
創建於2010-02-15 21:49:46
推送於2024-03-13 13:49:52
最后一次提交2024-03-13 16:49:50
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Emmet — the essential toolkit for web-developers

Emmet is a web-developer’s toolkit for boosting HTML & CSS code writing.

With Emmet, you can type expressions (abbreviations) similar to CSS selectors and convert them into code fragment with a single keystroke. For example, this abbreviation:

ul#nav>li.item$*4>a{Item $}

...can be expanded into:

<ul id="nav">
    <li class="item1"><a href="">Item 1</a></li>
    <li class="item2"><a href="">Item 2</a></li>
    <li class="item3"><a href="">Item 3</a></li>
    <li class="item4"><a href="">Item 4</a></li>
</ul>

Features

  • Familiar syntax: as a web-developer, you already know how to use Emmet. Abbreviation syntax is similar to CSS Selectors with shortcuts for id, class, custom attributes, element nesting and so on.
  • Dynamic snippets: unlike default editor snippets, Emmet abbreviations are dynamic and parsed as-you-type. No need to predefine them for each project, just type MyComponent>custom-element to convert any word into a tag.
  • CSS properties shortcuts: Emmet provides special syntax for CSS properties with embedded values. For example, bd1-s#f.5 will be exampled to border: 1px solid rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.5).
  • Available for most popular syntaxes: use single abbreviation to produce code for most popular syntaxes like HAML, Pug, JSX, SCSS, SASS etc.

Read more about Emmet features

This repo contains only core module for parsing and expanding Emmet abbreviations. Editor plugins are available as separate repos.

This is a monorepo: top-level project contains all the code required for converting abbreviation into code fragment while ./packages folder contains modules for parsing abbreviations into AST and can be used independently (for example, as lexer for syntax highlighting).

Installation

You can install Emmet as a regular npm module:

npm i emmet@rc

Note that current version is still in release candidate version so it should be installed with @rc tag. After release, it will be available as version 2.x.

Usage

To expand abbreviation, pass it to default function of emmet module:

import expand from 'emmet';

console.log(expand('p>a')); // <p><a href=""></a></p>

By default, Emmet expands markup abbreviation, e.g. abbreviation used for producing nested elements with attributes (like HTML, XML, HAML etc.). If you want to expand stylesheet abbreviation, you should pass it as a type property of second argument:

import expand from 'emmet';

console.log(expand('p10', { type: 'stylesheet' })); // padding: 10px;

A stylesheet abbreviation has slightly different syntax compared to markup one: it doesn’t support nesting and attributes but allows embedded values in element name.

Alternatively, Emmet supports syntaxes with predefined snippets and options:

import expand from 'emmet';

console.log(expand('p10', { syntax: 'css' })); // padding: 10px;
console.log(expand('p10', { syntax: 'stylus' })); // padding 10px

Predefined syntaxes already have type attribute which describes whether given abbreviation is markup or stylesheet, but if you want to use it with your custom syntax name, you should provide type config option as well (default is markup):

import expand from 'emmet';

console.log(expand('p10', {
    syntax: 'my-custom-syntax',
    type: 'stylesheet',
    options: {
        'stylesheet.between': '__',
        'stylesheet.after': '',
    }
})); // padding__10px

You can pass options property as well to shape-up final output or enable/disable various features. See src/config for more info and available options.

Extracting abbreviations from text

A common workflow with Emmet is to type abbreviation somewhere in source code and then expand it with editor action. To support such workflow, abbreviations must be properly extracted from source code:

import expand, { extract } from 'emmet';

const source = 'Hello world ul.tabs>li';
const data = extract(source, 22); // { abbreviation: 'ul.tabs>li' }

console.log(expand(data.abbreviation)); // <ul class="tabs"><li></li></ul>

The extract function accepts source code (most likely, current line) and character location in source from which abbreviation search should be started. The abbreviation is searched in backward direction: the location pointer is moved backward until it finds abbreviation bound. Returned result is an object with abbreviation property and start and end properties which describe location of extracted abbreviation in given source.

Most current editors automatically insert closing quote or bracket for (, [ and { characters so when user types abbreviation that uses attributes or text, it will end with the following state (, is caret location):

ul>li[title="Foo, "]

E.g. caret location is not at the end of abbreviation and must be moved a few characters ahead. The extract function is able to handle such cases with lookAhead option (enabled by default). This this option enabled, extract method automatically detects auto-inserted characters and adjusts location, which will be available as end property of the returned result:

import { extract } from 'emmet';

const source = 'a div[title] b';
const loc = 11; // right after "title" word

// `lookAhead` is enabled by default
console.log(extract(source, loc)); // { abbreviation: 'div[title]', start: 2, end: 12 }
console.log(extract(source, loc, { lookAhead: false })); // { abbreviation: 'title', start: 6, end: 11 }

By default, extract tries to detect markup abbreviations (see above). stylesheet abbreviations has slightly different syntax so in order to extract abbreviations for stylesheet syntaxes like CSS, you should pass type: 'stylesheet' option:

import { extract } from 'emmet';

const source = 'a{b}';
const loc = 3; // right after "b"

console.log(extract(source, loc)); // { abbreviation: 'a{b}', start: 0, end: 4 }


// Stylesheet abbreviations does not have `{text}` syntax
console.log(extract(source, loc, { type: 'stylesheet' })); // { abbreviation: 'b', start: 2, end: 3 }

Extract abbreviation with custom prefix

Lots of developers uses React (or similar) library for writing UI code which mixes JS and XML (JSX) in the same source code. Since any Latin word can be used as Emmet abbreviation, writing JSX code with Emmet becomes pain since it will interfere with native editor snippets and distract user with false positive abbreviation matches for variable names, methods etc.:

var div // `div` is a valid abbreviation, Emmet may transform it to `<div></div>`

A possible solution for this problem it to use prefix for abbreviation: abbreviation can be successfully extracted only if its preceded with given prefix.

import { extract } from 'emmet';

const source1 = '() => div';
const source2 = '() => <div';

extract(source1, source1.length); // Finds `div` abbreviation
extract(source2, source2.length); // Finds `div` abbreviation too

extract(source1, source1.length, { prefix: '<' }); // No match, `div` abbreviation is not preceded with `<` prefix
extract(source2, source2.length, { prefix: '<' }); // Finds `div` since it preceded with `<` prefix

With prefix option, you can customize your experience with Emmet in any common syntax (HTML, CSS and so on) if user is distracted too much with Emmet completions for any typed word. A prefix may contain multiple character but the last one must be a character which is not part of Emmet abbreviation. Good candidates are <, &, (emoji or Unicode symbol) and so on.

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