As I don't really know *ruby *at all the second option would be hard without an example. I am gravitating to your first option but I'm not sure what's involved in creating the namespace scope. For instance I have a namespace of:
namespace LG\API;
and after placing the cursor in front of a function within that namespace my scope is:
text.html.php
meta.embedded.block.php source.php attr.os-version.10.9.2 attr.rev-path.php.Insights.API.LG.src.api.*path.to.file* attr.scm.branch.feature/insights-timeseries attr.scm.git attr.scm.status.clean dyn.caret.end.line
I don't know if the PHP syntax for namespace, which doesn't bracket the scope but instead implies the whole file, is somehow to blame?
Ken
On 16 May 2014 00:35, Allan Odgaard mailinglist@textmate.org wrote:
On 15 May 2014, at 15:59, Ken Snyder wrote:
I'm guessing this isn't possible but I'd love to have my 'doc' tab trigger for PHP distinguish between the namespace it is in. Is this possible?
There are two options:
Put the namespace in the scope. We do this for C++, so for this code:
namespace oak { ‸ }
The scope contains meta.namespace-block.oak.c++. Though we don’t actually use this extra information for anything. 2.
Change the doc⇥ trigger to run a command that takes ‘document’ as input and have the command itself extract the namespace and act accordingly. In Objective-C we do that for the logm⇥ and super⇥snippets, the first one inserts a log statement that output all the parameters passed to the method, the latter inserts a call to the superclass.
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