Adam K Dean

Install Emmet (Zen Coding) in Sublime Text

Published on 11 September 2013 at 21:30 by Adam

For those who don't know, Zen Coding -- or Emmet as it's now known -- is a set of plugins for text editors that allow for high-speed coding and editing in HTML, XML, XSL, and other structured code formats via content assist. (Thanks Wikipedia!)

If you don't already use this, you should, and I'm going to show you (or future me) how to install it for Sublime Text. Note that 'merican users will have to use a different key binding, so if a menu doesn't pop up, try some other key combinations.

The first thing you want to do is open up Sublime Text. If you don't already have the package manager installed, then install it by bringing up the console Ctrl + ' (in Linux you may need to use Ctrl + `) and pasting in:

import urllib.request,os; pf = 'Package Control.sublime-package'; ipp = sublime.installed_packages_path(); urllib.request.install_opener( urllib.request.build_opener( urllib.request.ProxyHandler()) ); open(os.path.join(ipp, pf), 'wb').write(urllib.request.urlopen( 'http://sublime.wbond.net/' + pf.replace(' ','%20')).read())

Press enter and wait for that to install. Once complete, press Ctrl + Shift + P to bring up the command palette and type Install, press enter to select Package Control: Install package.

This should pop up a new menu where you can now type Emmet and press enter. Give it a few seconds to install and now you're good to go, you have Emmet -- or Zen Coding -- installed and can write your HTML and CSS more efficiently.



This post was first published on 11 September 2013 at 21:30. It was filed under archive with tags sublimetext, emmet, zencoding.