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Sublime text 3 folders sidebar
Sublime text 3 folders sidebar





  1. #Sublime text 3 folders sidebar full#
  2. #Sublime text 3 folders sidebar code#
  3. #Sublime text 3 folders sidebar free#
  4. #Sublime text 3 folders sidebar windows#

Now that we have our screen split into multiple groups what can we do with it? Moving Files Between Groups So if you’re editing two (or three) functions in the same file you can have each group open to that function and can easily switch between then. It also allows you to have the same file open in multiple locations. You can still use all of the keyboard shortcuts we’ve discussed and they’ll operate inside that group. The powerful thing about groups is that they act like their own little sublime editor.

#Sublime text 3 folders sidebar windows#

Grid View (alt + ctrl + 5 for Windows and option + command + 5 for OSX) Row View (alt + ctrl + shift + 2, or 3 for Windows and option + command + shift + 2, or 3 for OSX) :-)Ĭolumn View (alt + ctrl + 2, 3 or 4 for Windows and option + command + 2, 3 or 4 for OSX) I’ve never been able to figure out a good use for the grid layout because each individual file is too small for me to work with but maybe my screens aren’t big enough. I’ve found the multiple columns are good for monitors in a horizontal orientation and multiple rows are good for monitors in a vertical orientation. Sublime Text allows you to break the screen into multiple columns, multiple row, or a grid. Splitting Up Your Screen Into Multiple Groups Layouts and Groups are helpful when you’re working on more than one file at a time (and when are you not).

#Sublime text 3 folders sidebar free#

Distraction Free Mode is good if you really want to focus on a single file at a time.

#Sublime text 3 folders sidebar full#

The Distraction Free Mode goes into full screen mode and only shows the currently active file and sets the word wrap to 80 characters. Full Screen Mode just makes the current interface full screen (hides menu bar on OSX and makes it big on Windows). Sublime Text offers two full screen modes. This can be turned off my selecting the “Hide Console” option of the “View” menu. The console shows up in bottom of the screen and is useful for debugging problems with plug-ins and seeing what’s going on in the background. The console is another feature you should hide unless you need to use. I haven’t run into a case where it gets turned back on automatically so I’m glad there isn’t a hotkey for this. Selecting “View” menu’s “Hide Minimap” option will turn this off. I’m not a fan of the Minimap (section on right side of screen) because I find it to be a distraction, it’s hard to use to navigate, and it eats up space. This adds a list of open files to the side bar so you can easily see and jump to the open files. The other option that can be helpful is the “Show Open Files” option inside the “Side Bar” submenu. I’m willing to bet it’s one of my most used keyboard shortcuts. During the work day you may find it annoying to do this over and over as you use the sidebar so you can use the keyboard shortcut ctrl+k, ctrl+b in Windows or command+k, command+b to toggle the sidebar. To do this you can go to the “View” menu then “Side Bar” and “Hide Side Bar”. To really give yourself as much screen real estate as possible, it’s nice to hide this when it’s not being used. While it’s nice to have a list of these normally, it can be annoying to have it open. The sidebar is the section on right hand side of the screen that shows the list of files in your project.

#Sublime text 3 folders sidebar code#

We want to disabled most of the options to give us most working space possible because this will allow us to see as much code as possible. The first section of stuff to talk about are the menu items that show or hide items of the user interface. This article goes through several of those options and where it’s helpful. There are a couple features inside the “View” menu that will really help you maximize your efficiency in Sublime Text.







Sublime text 3 folders sidebar