pulsar/docs/customizing-atom.md
Kevin Sawicki df8e0a8464 📝 Add is-focused class to cursor example
This is required to take effect for the default Atom light syntax
theme.

Closes #2834
2014-07-06 10:08:24 -07:00

6.9 KiB

Customizing Atom

To change a setting, configure a theme, or install a package just open the Settings view in the current window by pressing cmd-,.

Changing The Theme

Atom comes with both light and dark UI themes as well as several syntax themes. You are also encouraged to create or fork your own theme.

To change the active theme just open the Settings view (cmd-,) and select the Themes section from the left hand side. You will see a drop-down menu to change the active Syntax and UI themes.

You can also install more themes from here by browsing the featured themes or searching for a specific theme.

Installing Packages

You can install non-bundled packages by going to the Packages section on left hand side of the Settings view (cmd-,). You will see several featured packages and you can also search for packages from here. The packages listed here have been published to atom.io which is the official registry for Atom packages.

You can also install packages from the command line using apm.

Check that you have apm installed by running the following command in your terminal:

apm help install

You should see a message print out with details about the apm install command.

If you do not, launch Atom and run the Atom > Install Shell Commands menu to install the apm and atom commands.

You can also install packages by using the apm install command:

  • apm install <package_name> to install the latest version.

  • apm install <package_name>@<package_version> to install a specific version.

For example apm install emmet@0.1.5 installs the 0.1.5 release of the Emmet package into ~/.atom/packages.

You can also use apm to find new packages to install:

  • apm search coffee to search for CoffeeScript packages.

  • apm view emmet to see more information about a specific package.

Customizing Key Bindings

Atom keymaps work similarly to stylesheets. Just as stylesheets use selectors to apply styles to elements, Atom keymaps use selectors to associate keystrokes with events in specific contexts. Here's a small example, excerpted from Atom's built-in keymaps:

'.editor':
  'enter': 'editor:newline'

'.mini.editor input':
  'enter': 'core:confirm'

This keymap defines the meaning of enter in two different contexts. In a normal editor, pressing enter emits the editor:newline event, which causes the editor to insert a newline. But if the same keystroke occurs inside of a select list's mini-editor, it instead emits the core:confirm event based on the binding in the more-specific selector.

By default, ~/.atom/keymap.cson is loaded when Atom is started. It will always be loaded last, giving you the chance to override bindings that are defined by Atom's core keymaps or third-party packages.

You can open this file in an editor from the Atom > Open Your Keymap menu.

You'll want to know all the commands available to you. Open the Settings panel (cmd-,) and select the Keybindings tab. It will show you all the keybindings currently in use.

Advanced Configuration

Atom loads configuration settings from the config.cson file in your ~/.atom directory, which contains CoffeeScript-style JSON (CSON):

'core':
  'excludeVcsIgnoredPaths': true
'editor':
  'fontSize': 18

The configuration itself is grouped by the package name or one of the two core namespaces: core and editor.

You can open this file in an editor from the Atom > Open Your Config menu.

Configuration Key Reference

  • core
    • disabledPackages: An array of package names to disable
    • excludeVcsIgnoredPaths: Don't search within files specified by .gitignore
    • ignoredNames: File names to ignore across all of Atom
    • projectHome: The directory where projects are assumed to be located
    • themes: An array of theme names to load, in cascading order
  • editor
    • autoIndent: Enable/disable basic auto-indent (defaults to true)
    • nonWordCharacters: A string of non-word characters to define word boundaries
    • fontSize: The editor font size
    • fontFamily: The editor font family
    • invisibles: Specify characters that Atom renders for invisibles in this hash
      • tab: Hard tab characters
      • cr: Carriage return (for Microsoft-style line endings)
      • eol: \n characters
      • space: Leading and trailing space characters
    • normalizeIndentOnPaste: Enable/disable conversion of pasted tabs to spaces
    • preferredLineLength: Identifies the length of a line (defaults to 80)
    • showInvisibles: Whether to render placeholders for invisible characters (defaults to false)
    • showIndentGuide: Show/hide indent indicators within the editor
    • showLineNumbers: Show/hide line numbers within the gutter
    • softWrap: Enable/disable soft wrapping of text within the editor
    • softWrapAtPreferredLineLength: Enable/disable soft line wrapping at preferredLineLength
    • tabLength: Number of spaces within a tab (defaults to 2)
  • fuzzyFinder
    • ignoredNames: Files to ignore only in the fuzzy-finder
  • whitespace
    • ensureSingleTrailingNewline: Whether to reduce multiple newlines to one at the end of files
    • removeTrailingWhitespace: Enable/disable striping of whitespace at the end of lines (defaults to true)
  • wrap-guide
    • columns: Array of hashes with a pattern and column key to match the the path of the current editor to a column position.

Quick Personal Hacks

init.coffee

When Atom finishes loading, it will evaluate init.coffee in your ~/.atom directory, giving you a chance to run arbitrary personal CoffeeScript code to make customizations. You have full access to Atom's API from code in this file. If customizations become extensive, consider creating a package.

You can open this file in an editor from the Atom > Open Your Init Script menu.

For example, if you have the Audio Beep configuration setting enabled, you could add the following code to your ~/.atom/init.coffee file to have Atom greet you with an audio beep every time it loads:

atom.beep()

This file can also be named init.js and contain JavaScript code.

styles.less

If you want to apply quick-and-dirty personal styling changes without creating an entire theme that you intend to publish, you can add styles to the styles.less file in your ~/.atom directory.

You can open this file in an editor from the Atom > Open Your Stylesheet menu.

For example, to change the color of the cursor, you could add the following rule to your ~/.atom/styles.less file:

.editor.is-focused .cursor {
  border-color: pink;
}

Unfamiliar with LESS? Read more about it here.

This file can also be named styles.css and contain CSS.