You can even define your own snippets if you want by defining a new sublime-snippet file for example you can take a look how Merlin did for this package
Important is the <scope>source.rainmeter</scope> that defines that you are in a Rainmeter file, <tabTrigger>trotator</tabTrigger> is the command you want to define for that snippet to activate and content is obviously the content.$2 for example are tab markers, thus $2 would be the position after tabbing once.
I played around a bit with the homepage https://thatsich.github.io/sublime-rainmeter/.
I tried using some stuff which is more fancy than the content it provided (content was like 4 years old).
I am not a frontend developer so if you have suggestions to improve the UX, feel free to open an issue.
eclectic-tech wrote:You can access the snippets in 2 ways:
1. Type 't' in the document, to show a popup list of template snippets for meters and measures.
2. Select 'Tools' menu and 'Snippets...' for a window list.
Thanks eclectictech - the power of the extremely obvious somehow skips me every time
There are many ways to be different - there is only one way to be yourself - be amazing at it
The law of averages says what it means; even if you get everything right, you will get something wrong. Therefore; self managing error trapping initiates another set of averages - amongst the errors, some of them will not be errors, instead those instances will appear to be "luck". One cannot complain of the 'appearance' of 'infinite regress of causation', even if it does not have a predictable pattern, only that it requires luck to achieve.
I pre-released a new version 2.14.1-beta.1 which enables you to install a skin from a folder. This is hopefully the final form of that feature and is base for:
installing by zip
installing by git
installing by GitHub
This might also enable to hook into existing platforms like DeviantArt to "browse" through skins and install from there.