I do a lot of text editing for work and there are some phrases that I have to type frequently. What’s the best way to quickly paste those phrases into a document using a shortcut or keyword? I mainly use Kwrite and Kate as i prefer plain text editors and need no formatting.

  • kbal
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    1010 months ago

    Vim macros are quite easy to use, if you already know how to vi.

    • @ouch
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      010 months ago

      Besides macros, I think vim had some other relevant feature for this. Just can’t remember it right now.

          • @[email protected]
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            210 months ago

            Yeah with its flags / regex / python support UltiSnips is really the gold standard of a snippet engine. In many other environments “snippets” really just means “substitute one string for another”, where UltiSnips is so much more!

      • @[email protected]
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        110 months ago

        Might be a plugin. I think I’m using friendly-snippets (whatever is in LazyVim). There is also LuaSnip. They feed into my auto completion plugin as one of several sources.

  • @ShittyBeatlesFCPres
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    710 months ago

    I use Autokey because I prefer a global snippets engine. Then it works in text editors, browsers, email clients, etc.

  • mrh
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    10 months ago

    If I understand you correctly, this is trivial in emacs:

    (defun insert-text ()
      (interactive)
      (insert "your text here"))
    
    (global-set-key your-keybind-here #'insert-text)
    

    You could make it a format string if it relies on data specific to some file or parameter. You could also make the keybind local to certain modes/files rather than a global keybind if you don’t want to pollute your keybind space.

  • Daeraxa
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    410 months ago

    Pulsar (i.e. active fork of Atom) has a pretty comprehensive snippets package that comes bundled with the editor. Can be configured with some fairly simple cson, for example with Markdown:

    '.source.gfm':
      'Hello Lemmy':
        'prefix': 'helem'
        'body': 'Hello Lemmy!'
    

    You type helem then press tab and it will expand to Hello Lemmy! when using the Markdown grammar (source.gfm).
    It can handle custom tab stops too so you can make a longer preformatted sentence with gaps to insert words which you can just tab through (the $1, $2, $3).

    '.source.gfm':
      'My custom snippet':
        'prefix': 'mcs'
        'body': 'My snippet stops here $1 and then here $2 and then continues $3'
    

    You can even do multi-line snippets. For anyone wanting to try it out the docs are here

  • @[email protected]
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    310 months ago

    Visual Studio Code has this feature. You can define user snippets using a JSON format and create any alias you like for each. Then, when editing a document you just start typing the alias and press tab when it suggests the snippet (no mousing around required).

    You can also create anchor points for variable content that you then tab through and fill out after inserting a snippet. If you find yourself using the same template for your writing this might be a helpful feature.

    I’m bad at describing things, here’s some documentation: https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/editor/userdefinedsnippets.

    This is all out of the box with no plugins installed. Also, I’ll point out that although the docs are coding related, you can make these work for any type of writing.

  • @z00s
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    310 months ago

    I’ve used Autokey with great success in the past. Easy to set up, just works.

  • @[email protected]
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    210 months ago

    Kate snippets. If you download them you think “huh do I need to know XML or what?”

    But just install the extension and everything has a nice GUI