Contents
Snippet definitions are stored in files in the filesystem and you have to arrange for YASnippet to load them (unless you use a YASnippet bundle) into snippet tables.
The triggering mechanisms (see Expanding snippets) will look up these snippet tables and (hopefully) expand your intended snippet.
The non-bundle version of YASnippet, once unpacked, comes with a full directory of snippets, which you can copy somewhere and use. You can also create or download, one or more directories.
Once these directories are in place reference them in the variable yas/root-directory and then load them with yas/load-directory:
;; Develop and keep personal snippets under ~/emacs.d/mysnippets
(setq yas/root-directory "~/emacs.d/mysnippets")
;; Load the snippets
(yas/load-directory yas/root-directory)
The point in using yas/root-directory (as opposed to calling yas/load-directory directly) is considering "~/emacs.d/mysnippets" for snippet development, so you can use commands like yas/new-snippet and others described in section Writing Snippets.
You can make this variable a list and store more items into it:
;; Develop in ~/emacs.d/mysnippets, but also
;; try out snippets in ~/Downloads/interesting-snippets
(setq yas/root-directory '("~/emacs.d/mysnippets"
"~/Downloads/interesting-snippets"))
;; Map `yas/load-directory' to every element
(mapc 'yas/load-directory yas/root-directory)
Here the directories after the first are loaded, their snippets considered for expansion, but development still happens in "~/emacs.d/mysnippets"
Once you've setup yas/root-directory , you can store snippets inside sub-directories of these directories.
Snippet definitions are put in plain text files. They are arranged by sub-directories, and the snippet tables are named after these directories.
The name corresponds to the Emacs mode where you want expansion to take place. For example, snippets for c-mode are put in the c-mode sub-directory. You can also skip snippet storage altogether and use the bundle (see YASnippet bundle).
Here is an excerpt of a directory hierarchy containing snippets for some modes:
$ tree
.
`-- text-mode
|-- cc-mode
| |-- c-mode
| | `-- printf
| |-- for
| |-- java-mode
| | `-- println
| `-- while
|-- email
|-- perl-mode
| |-- cperl-mode
| `-- for
`-- time
A parent directory acts as a parent table of any of its sub-directories. This is one of the ways YASnippet can share snippet definitions among different modes. As you can see above, c-mode and java-mode share the same parents cc-mode, while all modes are derived from text-mode.
This can be also used to as an alias -- cperl-mode is an empty directory whose parent is perl-mode.
If you place a plain text file .yas-parents inside one of the sub-directories you can bypass nesting and still have parent modes. In this file you just write white-space-separated names of modes. This allows more flexibility and readability of your snippet hierarchy.
$ tree
.
|-- c-mode
| |-- .yas-parents # contains "cc-mode text-mode"
| `-- printf
|-- cc-mode
| |-- for
| `-- while
|-- java-mode
| |-- .yas-parents # contains "cc-mode text-mode"
| `-- println
`-- text-mode
|-- email
`-- time
If you place an empty plain text file .yas-make-groups inside one of the mode directories, the names of these sub-directories are considered groups of snippets and The YASnippet Menu is organized much more cleanly, as you can see in the image.
Another alternative way to achieve this is to place a # group: directive inside the snippet definition. See Writing Snippets.
$ tree ruby-mode/
ruby-mode/
|-- .yas-make-groups
|-- collections
| |-- each
| `-- ...
|-- control structure
| |-- forin
| `-- ...
|-- definitions
| `-- ...
`-- general
`-- ...
Normally, file names act as the snippet expansion abbreviation (also known as the snippet key or snippet trigger, see Expanding Snippets).
However, if you customize the variable yas/ignore-filenames-as-triggers to be true or place an empty file .yas-ignore-filename-triggers you can use much more descriptive file names. This is useful if many snippets within a mode share the same trigger key.
$ tree rails-mode/
rails-mode/
|-- .yas-make-groups
|-- .yas-ignore-filename-triggers
|-- Insert ERb's <% __ %> or <%= __ %>.yasnippet
|-- asserts
| |-- assert(var = assigns(%3Avar)).yasnippet
| |-- assert_difference.yasnippet
| |-- assert_no_difference.yasnippet
| |-- assert_redirected_to (nested path plural).yasnippet
| |-- assert_redirected_to (nested path).yasnippet
| |-- assert_redirected_to (path plural).yasnippet
| |-- assert_redirected_to (path).yasnippet
| |-- assert_rjs.yasnippet
| `-- assert_select.yasnippet
The most convenient way to define snippets for YASnippet is to put them in a directory arranged by the mode and use yas/load-directory to load them.
However, this might slow down the Emacs start-up speed if you have many snippets. You can use yas/define-snippets to define a bunch of snippets for a particular mode in an Emacs-lisp file.
Since this is hard to maintain, there's a better way: define your snippets in directory and then call M-x yas/compile-bundle to compile it into a bundle file when you modified your snippets.
The release bundle of YASnippet is produced by yas/compile-bundle. The bundle uses yas/define-snippets to define snippets. This avoids the IO and parsing overhead when loading snippets.
Further more, the generated bundle is a stand-alone file not depending on yasnippet.el. The released bundles of YASnippet are all generated this way.
See the internal documentation for these functions
Root directory that stores the snippets for each major mode.
Can also be a list of strings, for multiple root directories. If you make this a list, the first element is always the user-created snippets directory.
Other directories are used for bulk reloading of all snippets using yas/reload-all
If non-nil, don't derive tab triggers from filenames.
This means a snippet without a # key: directive wont have a tab trigger.