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Bring a real terminal to Sublime Text

The first cross platform terminal for Sublime Text.

Unix shell Cmd.exe
Terminal in panel

This package is heavily inspired by TerminalView. Compare with TerminalView, this has

  • Windows support
  • continuous history
  • easily customizable themes (see Terminus Utilities)
  • unicode support
  • 256 colors support
  • better xterm support
  • terminal panel
  • imgcat support (PS: it also works on Linux / WSL)

Installation

By Package Control

  1. Download & Install Sublime Text 3 (https://www.sublimetext.com/3)
  2. Go to the menu Tools -> Install Package Control, then, wait few seconds until the installation finishes up
  3. Now, Go to the menu Preferences -> Package Control
  4. Type Add Channel on the opened quick panel and press Enter
  5. Then, input the following address and press Enter
    https://raw.githubusercontent.com/evandrocoan/StudioChannel/master/channel.json
    
  6. Go to the menu Tools -> Command Palette... (Ctrl+Shift+P)
  7. Type Preferences: Package Control Settings – User on the opened quick panel and press Enter
  8. Then, find the following setting on your Package Control.sublime-settings file:
    "channels":
    [
        "https://packagecontrol.io/channel_v3.json",
        "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/evandrocoan/StudioChannel/master/channel.json",
    ],
  9. And, change it to the following, i.e., put the https://raw.githubusercontent... line as first:
    "channels":
    [
        "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/evandrocoan/StudioChannel/master/channel.json",
        "https://packagecontrol.io/channel_v3.json",
    ],
    • The https://raw.githubusercontent... line must to be added before the https://packagecontrol.io... one, otherwise, you will not install this forked version of the package, but the original available on the Package Control default channel https://packagecontrol.io...
  10. Now, go to the menu Preferences -> Package Control
  11. Type Install Package on the opened quick panel and press Enter
  12. Then, search for Terminus and press Enter

See also:

  1. ITE - Integrated Toolset Environment
  2. Package control docs for details.

Getting started

  • run Terminus: Open Default Shell in View

User Key Bindings

You may find these key bindings useful. To edit, run Preferences: Terminus Key Bindings. Check the details for the arguments of terminus_open below.

  • toggle terminal panel
[
    { "keys": ["alt+`"], "command": "toggle_terminus_panel" }
]
  • open a terminal view at current file directory
[
    {
        "keys": ["ctrl+alt+t"], "command": "terminus_open", "args": {
            "config_name": "Default",
            "cwd": "${file_path:${folder}}"
        }
    }
]

or by passing a custom cmd, say ipython

[
    {
        "keys": ["ctrl+alt+t"], "command": "terminus_open", "args": {
            "cmd": "ipython",
            "cwd": "${file_path:${folder}}"
        }
    }
]
  • open terminal in a split view
[
    {
        "keys": ["ctrl+alt+t"],
        "command": "terminus_open",
        "args": {
            "config_name": "Default",
            "pre_window_hooks": [
                ["set_layout", {
                    "cols": [0.0, 1.0],
                    "rows": [0.0, 0.5, 1.0],
                    "cells": [[0, 0, 1, 1], [0, 1, 1, 2]]
                }],
                ["focus_group", {"group": 1}]
            ]
        }
    }
]

or by applying Origami's carry_file_to_pane

[
    {
        "keys": ["ctrl+alt+t"],
        "command": "terminus_open",
        "args": {
            "config_name": "Default",
            "post_window_hooks": [
                ["carry_file_to_pane", {"direction": "down"}]
            ]
        }
    }
]

User Commands in Palette

  • run Preferences: Terminus Command Palette. Check the details for the arguments of terminus_open below
[
    {
        "caption": "Terminus: Open Default Shell at Current Location",
        "command": "terminus_open",
        "args"   : {
            "config_name": "Default",
            "cwd": "${file_path:${folder}}"
        }
    }
]

or by passing custom cmd, say ipython

[
    {
        "caption": "Terminus: Open iPython",
        "command": "terminus_open",
        "args"   : {
            "cmd": "ipython",
            "cwd": "${file_path:${folder}}",
            "title": "iPython"
        }
    }
]
  • open terminal in a split view
[
    {
        "caption": "Terminus: Open Default Shell in Split View",
        "command": "terminus_open",
        "args": {
            "config_name": "Default",
            "pre_window_hooks": [
                ["set_layout", {
                    "cols": [0.0, 1.0],
                    "rows": [0.0, 0.5, 1.0],
                    "cells": [[0, 0, 1, 1], [0, 1, 1, 2]]
                }],
                ["focus_group", {"group": 1}]
            ]
        }
    }
]

or by applying Origami's carry_file_to_pane

[
    {
        "caption": "Terminus: Open Default Shell in Split View",
        "command": "terminus_open",
        "args": {
            "config_name": "Default",
            "post_window_hooks": [
                ["carry_file_to_pane", {"direction": "down"}]
            ]
        }
    }
]

User Build System

Use Terminus as a build system. For example, the following can be added to your project settings to allow "SSH to Remote" build system.

{
    "build_systems":
    [
        {
            "cmd":
            [
                "ssh", "[email protected]"
            ],
            "name": "SSH to Remote",
            "target": "terminus_open",
            "working_dir": "$folder"
        }
    ]
}

Another build system for compiling C++ (with g++) is possible with the following code (as project settings).

{
    "build_systems":
    [
        {
            "name": "Build & Run (g++)",
            "cmd":
            [
                "bash",
                "-c",
                "g++ -pedantic -Wall -Wextra -Wconversion -pthread \"${file}\" -o \"${file_path}/${file_base_name}\" && \"${file_path}/${file_base_name}\" && echo && echo Press ENTER to continue && read line && exit"
            ],
            "target": "terminus_open",
            "working_dir": "$folder"
        }
    ]
}

Alt-Left/Right to move between words (Unix)

  • Bash: add the following in .bash_profile or .bashrc
if test -n "$TERMINUS_SUBLIME"; then
    bind '"\e[1;3C": forward-word'
    bind '"\e[1;3D": backward-word'
fi
  • Zsh: add the following in .zshrc
if test -n "$TERMINUS_SUBLIME"; then
    bindkey "\e[1;3C" forward-word
    bindkey "\e[1;3D" backward-word
fi

Some programs, such as julia, does not recognize the standard keycodes for alt+left and alt+right. You could bind them to alt+b and alt+f respectively

[
    { "keys": ["alt+left"], "command": "terminus_keypress", "args": {"key": "b", "alt": true}, "context": [{"key": "terminus_view"}] },
    { "keys": ["alt+right"], "command": "terminus_keypress", "args": {"key": "f", "alt": true}, "context": [{"key": "terminus_view"}] }
]

Terminus API

  • A terminal could be opened using the command terminus_open with
window.run_command(
    "terminus_open", {
        "config_name": None,     # the shell config name, use "Default" for the default config
        "cmd": None,             # the cmd to execute
        "cwd": None,             # the working directory
        "working_dir": None,     # alias of "cwd"
        "env": {},               # extra environmental variables
        "title": None,           # title of the view
        "panel_name": None,      # the name of the panel if terminal should be opened in panel
        "tag": None,             # a tag to idFentify the terminal
        "pre_window_hooks": [],  # a list of window hooks before opening terminal
        "post_window_hooks": [], # a list of window hooks after opening terminal
        "post_view_hooks": [],   # a list of view hooks after opening terminal
        "auto_close": True       # auto close terminal if process exits successfully
    }
)

The fields cmd and cwd understand Sublime Text build system variables.

  • the setting view.settings().get("terminus_view.tag") can be used to identify the terminal and

  • keybind can be binded with specific tagged terminal

    {
        "keys": ["ctrl+alt+w"], "command": "terminus_close", "context": [
            { "key": "terminus_view.tag", "operator": "equal", "operand": "YOUR_TAG"}
        ]
    }
  • text can be sent to the terminal with
window.run_command(
    "terminus_send_string",
    {
        "string": "ls\n",
        "tag": "<YOUR_TAG>"        # ignore this or set it to None to send text to the first terminal found
    }
)

If tag is not provided or is None, the text will be sent to the first terminal found in the current window.

FAQ

Terminal panel background issue

If you are using DA UI and your terminal panel has weired background color, try playing with the setting panel_background_color in DA UI: Theme Settings.

{
    "panel_background_color": "$background_color"
}

Acknowledgments

This package won't be possible without pyte, pywinpty and ptyprocess.