Difference between revisions of "Sublime Text"

(People have been having trouble getting the previous code here to work, so hopefully this works for everyone.)
(On Windows)
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Now you can use CTRL + B to run your love project.
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Now you can use CTRL + B to run your love project. Note that this code doesn't seem to work if you have spaces in your $file_path.
  
 
=== On Mac ===
 
=== On Mac ===

Revision as of 10:25, 26 April 2014

Sublime Text is a sophisticated text editor for code, markup and prose.

Running love projects from Sublime Text 2

On Windows

Create a new Build System first: Tools -> Build System -> New Build System

Then paste the following code:

{
    "selector": "source.lua",
    "cmd": ["C:/Program Files/LOVE/love.exe", "$file_path"],
    "shell": true
}

Now you can use CTRL + B to run your love project. Note that this code doesn't seem to work if you have spaces in your $file_path.

On Mac

Create a new Build System first: Tools -> Build System -> New Build System

Then paste in the following code:

{
    "selector": "source.lua",
    "cmd": ["/Applications/love.app/Contents/MacOS/love", "$file_path"]
}

(This is assuming that your love.app is in the Applications folder)

Now you can use CMD + B to run your love project.


Displaying live console output in Sublime Text 2

By default the console in Sublime Text will not display any output, such as print() calls, until the LOVE application has been closed.

To make the console output display live add the following code to the top of your main.lua file, or inside conf.lua:

io.stdout:setvbuf("no")

See also