Contents

Modules

Most of Textadept’s functionality comes from Lua modules. Essentially there are two classes of module: generic and language-specific. A generic module provides features for all programming languages while a language-specific module provides features for a specific programming language.

Generic

Generic modules have a broad scope and are usually available for programming in all languages or writing plain-text. An example is the textadept module which implements most of Textadept’s functionality (find & replace, key bindings, menus, snippets, etc.). These kinds of modules are generally loaded on startup. See the preferences page for instructions on how to load generic modules when Textadept starts.

Language-Specific

Language-specific modules have a scope limited to a single programming language. The name of the module is named after the language’s lexer in the lexers/ directory and is automatically loaded when editing source code in that particular language. In addition to the source code editing features discussed previously, these kinds of modules typically also have shell commands for running and compiling code, indentation settings, custom key bindings, and perhaps a custom context menu. These features are discussed below.

Compile and Run

Most language-specific modules have a command that compiles and/or runs the code in the current file. Pressing Ctrl+Shift+R (⌘⇧R on Mac OSX | M-^R in curses) executes the command for compiling code and Ctrl+R (⌘R | ^R) executes the command for running code. Any recognized errors in the output are marked. Pressing Ctrl+Alt+E (^⌘E | M-X) attempts to jump to the source of the next recognized error and Ctrl+Alt+Shift+E (^⌘⇧E | M-S-X) attempts to jump to the previous one. Double-clicking on errors will also jump to their sources. Note: In order for these features to work, the language you are working with must have its compile and run commands and error format defined. If the language-specific module does not exist or does not define commands or an error format, it can be done manually in your user-init file.

Runtime Error

Buffer Properties

Some programming languages have style guidelines for indentation and/or line endings which differ from Textadept’s defaults. In this case, language-specific modules set these preferences. If you wish to change them or use your own preferences, see the language module preferences section.

Key Bindings

Most language-specific modules have a set of key bindings for custom commands. See the module’s LuaDoc or code to find out which key bindings are assigned. They are typically stored in the Ctrl+L (⌘L on Mac OSX | M-L in curses) key chain prefix.

Context Menu

Some language-specific modules add extra actions to the context menu. Right-click inside the view to bring up this menu.

Getting Modules

The officially supported language modules are hosted here and are available as a separate download. To upgrade to the most recent version of a module, you can either use Mercurial (run hg pull and then hg update on or from within the module) or download a zipped version from the module’s repository homepage and overwrite the existing one.

For now, user-created modules are obtained from the wiki.

Installing Modules

If you do not have write permissions for the directory Textadept is installed in, place the module in your ~/.textadept/modules/ folder and replace all instances of _HOME with _USERHOME in the module’s init.lua. It is recommended to put all custom or user-created modules in your ~/.textadept/modules/ directory so they will not be overwritten when you update Textadept. Also, modules in that directory override any modules in Textadept’s modules/ directory. This means that if you have your own lua module, it will be loaded instead of the one that comes with Textadept.

Developing Modules

See the module LuaDoc.