HTML and Haml snippets for Twitter Bootstrap 3.3.2 markup, for the Vim plugin snipMate.
Installation using Pathogen
$ cd ~/.vim
$ mkdir bundle
$ cd bundle
# Install dependencies:
$ git clone https://github.com/garbas/vim-snipmate.git
$ git clone https://github.com/tomtom/tlib_vim.git
$ git clone https://github.com/MarcWeber/vim-addon-mw-utils.git
# Install bootstrap-snippets
$ git clone -b bootstrap-3-3-2 git://github.com/bonsaiben/bootstrap-snippets.git
In an html or haml file, type a trigger name in Insert mode, and press Tab
to expand it into HTML markup.
Trigger names are meant to be as predictable as possible without being too long or redundant.
Most trigger names correspond directly to the relevant tag or class name, minus hyphens. For example, btnprimary
becomes:
<button type="button" class="btn btn-primary">Default</button>
Markup with .btn
class uses the <button>
tag by default, however there is usually a corresponding <a>
tag version with the same trigger preceded by an a
. For example, with btnprimary
there is also abtnprimary
which becomes:
<a href="#" class="btn btn-primary" role="button">Primary</a>
See Trigger Glossary below for a full list of triggers.
By default html snippets will only work in html files, or file formats associated with the html filetype in vim. If you are using a format like Ruby ERB (.html.erb
) and the html snippets are not working, you may have to tell Vim to associate .html.erb
files with the html filetype, for example:
autocmd BufRead,BufNewFile *.html.erb set filetype=html
bootstrap-snippets ships with a dictionary file containing all of the triggers. This can be used as a vim dictionary for autocomplete (Insert mode CTRL+N/CTRL+P).
Add the dictionary file and enable dictionary autocomplete:
set dictionary+=~/.vim/bundle/bootstrap-snippets/dictionary
set complete+=k
You can find a trigger glossary in the Wiki here.