I've looked through the docs but can't figure it out...
I'm trying to add CSS3 stuff to the default CSS bundle, but I don't want to touch the original bundle off course so in my own bundle I try something like:
{ scopeName = 'source.css.mcss'; fileTypes = ( 'css', 'css.erb', 'less'); foldingStartMarker = '/**(?!*)|{\s*($|/*(?!.*?*/.*\S))'; foldingStopMarker = '(?<!*)**/|^\s*}'; patterns = ( { name = 'meta.selector.css'; begin = '^(?=\s*[:.*#a-zA-Z])'; end = '(?={)'; patterns = ( { name = 'entity.name.tag.css'; match = '\b(article|aside|audio|canvas|command|datalist|details|embed|figcaption|figure|footer|header|hgroup|keygen |mark|menu|meter|nav|output|progress|rp|rt|ruby|section|summary|time|video|wbr)\b'; }, ); }, { include = "source.css"; } ); }
and I get all the new elements highlighted like they're supposed to, but that "cancels out" the standard CSS elements. I thought adding the "source.css" would take care of that but obviously it doesn't... Do I have to include the standard elements back into the regex? Is there a better way?
Thanks for any pointer in the right direction!
On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 20:55, minimal design textmate@minimaldesign.net wrote:
I've looked through the docs but can't figure it out... I'm trying to add CSS3 stuff to the default CSS bundle, but I don't want to touch the original bundle off course so in my own bundle I try something like:
{ scopeName = 'source.css.mcss'; fileTypes = ( 'css', 'css.erb', 'less'); foldingStartMarker = '/**(?!*)|{\s*($|/*(?!.*?*/.*\S))'; foldingStopMarker = '(?<!*)**/|^\s*}'; patterns = ( { name = 'meta.selector.css'; begin = '^(?=\s*[:.*#a-zA-Z])'; end = '(?={)'; patterns = ( { name = 'entity.name.tag.css'; match = '\b(article|aside|audio|canvas|command|datalist|details|embed|figcaption|figure|footer|header|hgroup|keygen |mark|menu|meter|nav|output|progress|rp|rt|ruby|section|summary|time|video|wbr)\b'; }, ); }, { include = "source.css"; } ); } and I get all the new elements highlighted like they're supposed to, but that "cancels out" the standard CSS elements. I thought adding the "source.css" would take care of that but obviously it doesn't... Do I have to include the standard elements back into the regex? Is there a better way? Thanks for any pointer in the right direction!
Not sure if it'll work but you could try adding your pattern after including `source.css`, i.e. patterns = ( { include = "source.css"; }, … );
HTH, Martin