forked from VimPlug/emmet-vim
ff1aaf88a9c04d53fd23501cae2cdfc914631022
Emmet-vim
emmet-vim is a vim plug-in which provides support for expanding abbreviations similar to emmet.
Installation
cd ~/.vim
unzip emmet-vim.zip
To install using pathogen.vim:
cd ~/.vim/bundle
git clone https://github.com/mattn/emmet-vim.git
To install using Vundle:
# add this line to your .vimrc file
Bundle "mattn/emmet-vim"
To checkout the source from repository:
cd ~/.vim/bundle
git clone https://github.com/mattn/emmet-vim.git
or:
git clone https://github.com/mattn/emmet-vim.git
cd emmet-vim
cp plugin/emmet.vim ~/.vim/plugin/
cp autoload/emmet.vim ~/.vim/autoload/
cp -a autoload/emmet ~/.vim/autoload/
Quick Tutorial
Open or create a New File:
vim index.html
Type ("_" is the cursor position):
html:5_
Then type "<c-y>," (Ctrl + y + ','), you should see:
<!DOCTYPE HTML>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<title></title>
</head>
<body>
_
</body>
</html>
Enable in different mode
If you don't want to enable emmet in all modes,
you can use set these options in vimrc:
let g:user_emmet_mode='n' "only enable normal mode functions.
let g:user_emmet_mode='inv' "enable all functions, which is equal to
let g:user_emmet_mode='a' "enable all function in all mode.
Enable just for html/css
let g:user_emmet_install_global = 0
autocmd FileType html,css EmmetInstall
Redefine trigger key
let g:user_emmet_leader_key='<C-Z>'
Adding custom snippets
If you have installed the web-api for emmet-vim you can also add your own snippets using a custom snippets.json file.
Once you have installed the web-api add this line to your .vimrc:
let g:user_emmet_settings = webapi#json#decode(join(readfile(expand('~/.snippets_custom.json')), "\n"))
You can change the path to your snippets_custom.json according to your preferences.
Here you can find instructions about creating your customized snippets.json file.
Project Authors
Donating
Links
Emmet official site:
zen-coding official site:
emmet.vim:
development repository:
my blog posts about zencoding-vim:
Japanese blog posts about zencoding-vim:
A Chinese translation of the tutorial:
Description
Languages
Vim Script
99.9%
Makefile
0.1%

