1 .. |(version)| replace:: 2.1
2 .. -*- reStructuredText -*-
8 -------------------------
9 A fast, light, GTK+ IDE
10 -------------------------
12 :Authors: Enrico Tröger,
20 Copyright © 2005 The Geany contributors
22 This document is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public
23 License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
24 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. A copy of this
25 license can be found in the file COPYING included with the source code
26 of this program, and also in the chapter `GNU General Public License`_.
40 Geany is a small and lightweight Integrated Development Environment. It
41 was developed to provide a small and fast IDE, which has only a few
42 dependencies on other packages. Another goal was to be as independent
43 as possible from a particular Desktop Environment like KDE or GNOME -
44 Geany only requires the GTK+ runtime libraries.
46 Some basic features of Geany:
50 * Autocompletion of symbols/words
51 * Construct completion/snippets
52 * Auto-closing of XML and HTML tags
54 * Many supported filetypes including C, Java, PHP, HTML, Python, Perl,
58 * Build system to compile and execute your code
59 * Simple project management
67 You can obtain Geany from https://www.geany.org/ or perhaps also from
68 your distribution. For a list of available packages, please see
69 https://www.geany.org/Download/ThirdPartyPackages.
76 Geany is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License
77 as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of
78 the License, or (at your option) any later version. A copy of this
79 license can be found in the file COPYING included with the source
80 code of this program and in the chapter, `GNU General Public License`_.
82 The included Scintilla library (found in the subdirectory
83 ``scintilla/``) has its own license, which can be found in the chapter,
84 `License for Scintilla and SciTE`_.
91 This documentation is available in HTML and text formats.
92 The latest version can always be found at https://www.geany.org/.
94 If you want to contribute to it, see `Contributing to this document`_.
106 You will need the GTK (>= 3.24) libraries and their dependencies
107 (Pango, GLib and ATK). Your distro should provide packages for these,
108 usually installed by default. For Windows, you can download an installer
109 from the website which bundles these libraries.
115 There are many binary packages available. For an up-to-date but maybe
116 incomplete list see https://www.geany.org/Download/ThirdPartyPackages.
122 Compiling Geany is quite easy.
123 To do so, you need the GTK (>= 3.24) libraries and header files.
124 You also need the Pango, GLib and ATK libraries and header files.
125 All these files are available at https://www.gtk.org, but very often
126 your distro will provide development packages to save the trouble of
127 building these yourself.
129 Furthermore you need, of course, a C and C++ compiler. The GNU versions
130 of these tools are recommended.
132 Autotools based build system
133 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
135 To compile Geany yourself, you just need the Make tool, preferably GNU Make.
137 Then run the following commands::
152 The configure script supports several common options, for a detailed
158 You may also want to read the INSTALL file for advanced installation
161 * See also `Compile-time options`_.
163 Dynamic linking loader support and VTE
164 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
165 In the case that your system lacks dynamic linking loader support, you
166 probably want to pass the option ``--disable-vte`` to the ``configure``
167 script. This prevents compiling Geany with dynamic linking loader
168 support for automatically loading ``libvte.so.4`` if available.
172 If there are any errors during compilation, check your build
173 environment and try to find the error, otherwise contact the mailing
174 list or one the authors. Sometimes you might need to ask for specific
175 help from your distribution.
180 If you want to find Geany's system files after installation you may
181 want to know the installation prefix.
183 Pass the ``--print-prefix`` option to Geany to check this - see
184 `Command line options`_. The first path is the prefix.
186 On Unix-like systems this is commonly ``/usr`` if you installed from
187 a binary package, or ``/usr/local`` if you build from source.
190 Editing system files is not necessary as you should use the
191 per-user configuration files instead, which don't need root
192 permissions. See `Configuration files`_.
202 You can start Geany in the following ways:
204 * From the Desktop Environment menu:
206 Choose in your application menu of your used Desktop Environment:
207 Development --> Geany.
209 At Windows-systems you will find Geany after installation inside
210 the application menu within its special folder.
212 * From the command line:
214 To start Geany from a command line, type the following and press
222 The Geany window is shown in the following figure:
224 .. image:: ./images/main_window.png
227 Screenshots in this document are taken with the default GTK Adwaita
228 theme, but Geany will adapt to the desktop GTK theme that is set.
230 The workspace has the following parts:
233 * An optional toolbar.
234 * An optional sidebar that can show the following tabs:
236 * Documents - A `document list <#document-list-views>`_.
237 * Symbols - A list of symbols in your code.
239 * The main editor window.
240 * An optional message window which can show the following tabs:
242 * Status - A list of status messages.
243 * Compiler - The output of compiling or building programs.
244 * Messages - Results of `Find Usage`_, `Find in Files`_ and other actions
245 * Scribble - A text scratchpad for any use.
246 * Terminal - An optional `terminal window <#virtual-terminal-emulator-widget-vte>`_.
250 Most of these can be configured in the `Interface preferences`_, the
251 `View menu`_, or the popup menu for the relevant area.
253 Additional tabs may be added to the sidebar and message window by plugins.
255 The position of the tabs can be selected in the interface preferences.
257 The sizes of the sidebar and message window can be adjusted by
258 dragging the dividers.
263 The sidebar has a right click menu that can control what is visible and
264 has actions specific to the tab (other tabs added by plugins are
265 described by that plugin documentation):
269 * expand/collapse the tree
270 * control sorting order
271 * control whether to group symbols by their type
272 * locate the symbol in documents
274 The symbols tab can also be filtered by typing a string into
275 the entry at the top of the tab. All symbols that contain the entered
276 string as a substring will be shown in the tree. Multiple filters can
277 be separated by a space.
281 * expand/collapse the tree
282 * save to or reload from files
283 * search tree based at selected file
284 * show or hide the document paths
289 ============ ======================= =================================================
290 Short option Long option Function
291 ============ ======================= =================================================
292 *none* +number Set initial line number for the first opened file
293 (same as --line, do not put a space between the + sign
294 and the number). E.g. "geany +7 foo.bar" will open the
295 file foo.bar and place the cursor in line 7.
297 *none* --column Set initial column number for the first opened file.
299 -c dir_name --config=directory_name Use an alternate configuration directory. The default
300 configuration directory is ``~/.config/geany/`` and that
301 is where ``geany.conf`` and other configuration files
304 *none* --ft-names Print a list of Geany's internal filetype names (useful
305 for snippets configuration).
307 -g --generate-tags Generate a global tags file (see
308 `Generating a global tags file`_).
310 -P --no-preprocessing Don't preprocess C/C++ files when generating tags file.
312 -i --new-instance Do not open files in a running instance, force opening
313 a new instance. Only available if Geany was compiled
314 with support for Sockets.
316 -l --line Set initial line number for the first opened file.
318 *none* --list-documents Return a list of open documents in a running Geany
320 This can be used to read the currently opened documents in
321 Geany from an external script or tool. The returned list
322 is separated by newlines (LF) and consists of the full,
323 UTF-8 encoded filenames of the documents.
324 Only available if Geany was compiled with support for
327 -m --no-msgwin Do not show the message window. Use this option if you
328 do not need compiler messages or VTE support.
330 -n --no-ctags Do not load symbol completion and call tip data. Use this
331 option if you do not want to use them.
333 -p --no-plugins Do not load plugins or plugin support.
335 *none* --print-prefix Print installation prefix, the data directory, the lib
336 directory and the locale directory (in that order) to
337 stdout, one line each. This is mainly intended for plugin
338 authors to detect installation paths.
340 -r --read-only Open all files given on the command line in read-only mode.
341 This only applies to files opened explicitly from the command
342 line, so files from previous sessions or project files are
345 -s --no-session Do not load the previous session's files.
347 -t --no-terminal Do not load terminal support. Use this option if you do
348 not want to load the virtual terminal emulator widget
349 at startup. If you do not have ``libvte.so.4`` installed,
350 then terminal-support is automatically disabled. Only
351 available if Geany was compiled with support for VTE.
353 *none* --socket-file Use this socket filename for communication with a
354 running Geany instance. This can be used with the following
355 command to execute Geany on the current workspace::
357 geany --socket-file=/tmp/geany-sock-$(xprop -root _NET_CURRENT_DESKTOP | awk '{print $3}')
359 *none* --vte-lib Specify explicitly the path including filename or only
360 the filename to the VTE library, e.g.
361 ``/usr/lib/libvte.so`` or ``libvte.so``. This option is
362 only needed when the auto-detection does not work. Only
363 available if Geany was compiled with support for VTE.
365 -v --verbose Be verbose (print useful status messages).
367 -V --version Show version information and exit.
369 -? --help Show help information and exit.
371 *none* *files ...* Open all given filenames at startup.
372 If a running instance is detected, pass filenames
373 *file:line ...* to it instead.
375 *file:line:col ...* Geany also recognizes line and column information when
376 appended to the filename with colons, e.g.
377 ``geany foo.bar:10:5`` will open the file ``foo.bar`` and
378 place the cursor in line 10 at column 5.
380 If a filename does not exist, create a new document
381 with the desired filename if the
382 *Open new files from the command-line*
383 `file pref <#files-preferences>`_ is set.
385 A project can also be opened, but the project filename (\*.geany)
386 must be the first non-option argument. Any other
387 project filenames will be opened as text files.
388 ============ ======================= =================================================
390 Geany also supports all generic GTK options, a list is available on the
400 At startup, Geany loads all files from the last time Geany was
401 launched. You can disable this feature in the preferences dialog
402 (see `General Startup preferences`_).
404 You can start several instances of Geany, but only the first will
405 load files from the last session. In the subsequent instances, you
406 can find these files in the file menu under the *Recent files* item.
407 By default this contains the last 10 recently opened files. You can
408 change the number of recently opened files in the
409 `Files tab <#files-preferences>`_ of the preferences dialog.
411 To run a second instance of Geany, do not specify any filenames on
412 the command-line, or disable opening files in a running instance
413 using the ``-i`` `command line option <#command-line-options>`_.
421 The *File->Open* command will show a dialog to choose one or more text
422 files to open. There is a list of file filters on the right with the
425 * All files (default)
426 * All source - a combination of all the patterns for each filetype (see
427 `Filetype extensions`_)
428 * Individual filetypes
430 Clicking *More options* will reveal controls to open files with a
431 specific filetype and/or encoding (see `Character sets and Unicode
432 Byte-Order-Mark (BOM)`_).
435 Opening files from the command-line in a running instance
436 `````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
438 Geany detects if there is an instance of itself already running and opens files
439 from the command-line in that instance. So, Geany can
440 be used to view and edit files by opening them from other programs
441 such as a file manager.
443 You can also pass line number and column number information, e.g.::
445 geany some_file.foo:55:4
447 This would open the file ``some_file.foo`` with the cursor on line 55,
450 If you do not like this for some reason, you can disable using the first
451 instance by using the appropriate command line option -- see the section
452 called `Command line options`_.
455 Virtual terminal emulator widget (VTE)
456 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
458 If you have installed ``libvte.so`` on your system, it is loaded
459 automatically by Geany, and you will have a terminal widget in the
460 notebook at the bottom.
462 If Geany cannot find any ``libvte.so`` at startup, the terminal widget
463 will not be loaded. So there is no need to install the package containing
464 this file in order to run Geany. Additionally, you can disable the use
465 of the terminal widget by command line option, for more information
466 see the section called `Command line options`_.
468 You can use this terminal (from now on called VTE) much as you would
469 a terminal program like xterm. There is basic clipboard support. You
470 can paste the contents of the clipboard by pressing the right mouse
471 button to open the popup menu, and choosing Paste. To copy text from
472 the VTE, just select the desired text and then press the right mouse
473 button and choose Copy from the popup menu. On systems running the
474 X Window System you can paste the last selected text by pressing the
475 middle mouse button in the VTE (on 2-button mice, the middle button
476 can often be simulated by pressing both mouse buttons together).
478 In the preferences dialog you can specify a shell which should be
479 started in the VTE. To make the specified shell a login shell just
480 use the appropriate command line options for the shell. These options
481 should be found in the manual page of the shell. For zsh and bash
482 you can use the argument ``--login``.
485 Geany tries to load ``libvte.so``. If this fails, it tries to load
486 some other filenames. If this fails too, you should check whether you
487 installed libvte correctly. Again note, Geany will run without this
490 It could be, that the library is called something else than
491 ``libvte.so`` (e.g. on FreeBSD 6.0 it is called ``libvte.so.8``). If so
492 please set a link to the correct file (as root)::
494 # ln -s /usr/lib/libvte.so.X /usr/lib/libvte.so
496 Obviously, you have to adjust the paths and set X to the number of your
499 You can also specify the filename of the VTE library to use on the command
500 line (see the section called `Command line options`_) or at compile time
501 by specifying the command line option ``--with-vte-module-path`` to
508 Switching between documents
509 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
511 The documents list and the editor tabs are two different ways
512 to switch between documents using the mouse. When you hit the key
513 combination to move between tabs, the order is determined by the tab
514 order. It is not alphabetical as shown in the documents list
515 (regardless of whether or not editor tabs are visible).
517 See the `Notebook tab keybindings`_ section for useful
518 shortcuts including for Most-Recently-Used document switching.
523 There are three different ways to display documents on the sidebar if *Show
524 documents list* is active. To switch between views press the right mouse button
525 on the documents list and select one of these items:
528 Show only file names of open documents in sorted order.
530 .. image:: ./images/sidebar_documents_only.png
533 Show open documents as a two-level tree in which first level is the paths
534 of directories containing open files and the second level is the file names of
535 the documents open in that path. All documents with the same path are grouped
536 together under the same first level item. Paths are in sorted order and
537 documents are sorted within each group.
539 .. image:: ./images/sidebar_show_paths.png
542 Show paths as above, but as a multiple level partial tree. The tree is only
543 expanded at positions where two or more directory paths to open documents
544 share the same prefix. The common prefix is shown as a parent level, and
545 the remainder of those paths are shown as child levels. This applies
546 recursively down the paths making a tree to the file names of open documents,
547 which are grouped in sorted order as an additional level below the last path
550 For convenience two common file locations are handled specially, open
551 files below the users home directory and open files below an open project
552 base path. Each of these is moved to its own top level tree instead of
553 being in place in the normal tree. The top level of these trees are each
554 labelled differently. For the home directory tree the path of the home
555 directory is shown as ``~``, and for the project tree the path to the project
556 base path is shown simply as the project name.
558 .. image:: ./images/sidebar_show_tree.png
560 In all cases paths and file names that do not fit in the width available are ellipsised.
564 The `Document->Clone` menu item copies the current document's text,
565 cursor position and properties into a new untitled document. If
566 there is a selection, only the selected text is copied. This can be
567 useful when making temporary copies of text or for creating
568 documents with similar or identical contents.
570 Automatic filename insertion on `Save As...`
571 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
572 If a document is saved via `Document->Save As...` then the filename is
573 automatically inserted into the comment header replacing text like
574 `untitled.ext` in the first 3 lines of the file. E.g. if a new ``.c``
575 file is created using `File->New (with Template)` then the text `untitled.c`
576 in line 2 would be replaced with the choosen file name on `Save As...`
577 (this example assumes the default file templates being used).
580 Character sets and Unicode Byte-Order-Mark (BOM)
581 ------------------------------------------------
587 Geany provides support for detecting and converting character sets. So
588 you can open and save files in different character sets, and even
589 convert a file from one character set to another. To do this,
590 Geany uses the character conversion capabilities of the GLib library.
592 Only text files are supported, i.e. opening files which contain
593 NULL-bytes may fail. Geany will try to open the file anyway but it is
594 likely that the file will be truncated because it can only be read up
595 to the first occurrence of a NULL-byte. All characters after this
596 position are lost and are not written when you save the file.
598 Geany tries to detect the encoding of a file while opening it, but
599 auto-detecting the encoding of a file is not easy and sometimes an
600 encoding might not be detected correctly. In this case you have to
601 set the encoding of the file manually in order to display it
602 correctly. You can this in the file open dialog by selecting an
603 encoding in the drop down box or by reloading the file with the
604 file menu item "Reload as". The auto-detection works well for most
605 encodings but there are also some encodings where it is known that
606 auto-detection has problems.
608 There are different ways to set different encodings in Geany:
610 * Using the file open dialog
612 This opens the file with the encoding specified in the encoding drop
613 down box. If the encoding is set to "Detect from file" auto-detection
614 will be used. If the encoding is set to "Without encoding (None)" the
615 file will be opened without any character conversion and Geany will
616 not try to auto-detect the encoding (see below for more information).
618 * Using the "Reload as" menu item
620 This item reloads the current file with the specified encoding. It can
621 help if you opened a file and found out that the wrong encoding was used.
623 * Using the "Set encoding" menu item
625 Contrary to the above two options, this will not change or reload
626 the current file unless you save it. It is useful when you want to
627 change the encoding of the file.
629 * Specifying the encoding in the file itself
631 As mentioned above, auto-detecting the encoding of a file may fail on
632 some encodings. If you know that Geany doesn't open a certain file,
633 you can add the specification line, described in the next section,
634 to the beginning of the file to force Geany to use a specific
635 encoding when opening the file.
638 In-file encoding specification
639 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
641 Geany detects meta tags of HTML files which contain charset information
644 <meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-15" />
646 and the specified charset is used when opening the file. This is useful if the
647 encoding of the file cannot be detected properly.
648 For non-HTML files you can also define a line like::
650 /* geany_encoding=ISO-8859-15 */
654 # geany_encoding=ISO-8859-15 #
656 to force an encoding to be used. The #, /\* and \*/ are examples
657 of filetype-specific comment characters. It doesn't matter which
658 characters are around the string " geany_encoding=ISO-8859-15 " as long
659 as there is at least one whitespace character before and after this
660 string. Whitespace characters are in this case a space or tab character.
661 An example to use this could be you have a file with ISO-8859-15
662 encoding but Geany constantly detects the file encoding as ISO-8859-1.
663 Then you simply add such a line to the file and Geany will open it
664 correctly the next time.
666 Since Geany 0.15 you can also use lines which match the
667 regular expression used to find the encoding string:
668 ``coding[\t ]*[:=][\t ]*([a-z0-9-]+)[\t ]*``
671 These specifications must be in the first 512 bytes of the file.
672 Anything after the first 512 bytes will not be recognized.
676 # encoding = ISO-8859-15
680 # coding: ISO-8859-15
682 Special encoding "None"
683 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
685 There is a special encoding "None" which uses no
686 encoding. It is useful when you know that Geany cannot auto-detect
687 the encoding of a file and it is not displayed correctly. Especially
688 when the file contains NULL-bytes this can be useful to skip auto
689 detection and open the file properly at least until the occurrence
690 of the first NULL-byte. Using this encoding opens the file as it is
691 without any character conversion.
694 Unicode Byte-Order-Mark (BOM)
695 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
697 Furthermore, Geany detects a Unicode Byte Order Mark (see
698 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte_Order_Mark for details). Of course,
699 this feature is only available if the opened file is in a Unicode
700 encoding. The Byte Order Mark helps to detect the encoding of a file,
701 e.g. whether it is UTF-16LE or UTF-16BE and so on. On Unix-like systems
702 using a Byte Order Mark could cause some problems for programs not
703 expecting it, e.g. the compiler gcc stops
704 with stray errors, PHP does not parse a script containing a BOM and
705 script files starting with a she-bang maybe cannot be started. In the
706 status bar you can easily see whether the file starts with a BOM or
709 If you want to set a BOM for a file or if you want to remove it
710 from a file, just use the document menu and toggle the checkbox.
713 If you are unsure what a BOM is or if you do not understand where
714 to use it, then it is probably not important for you and you can
726 Geany provides basic code folding support. Folding means the ability to
727 show and hide parts of the text in the current file. You can hide
728 unimportant code sections and concentrate on the parts you are working on
729 and later you can show hidden sections again. In the editor window there is
730 a small grey margin on the left side with [+] and [-] symbols which
731 show hidden parts and hide parts of the file respectively. By
732 clicking on these icons you can simply show and hide sections which are
733 marked by vertical lines within this margin. For many filetypes nested
734 folding is supported, so there may be several fold points within other
738 You can customize the folding icon and line styles - see the
739 filetypes.common `Folding Settings`_.
741 If you don't like it or don't need it at all, you can simply disable
742 folding support completely in the preferences dialog.
744 The folding behaviour can be changed with the "Fold/Unfold all children of
745 a fold point" option in the preference dialog. If activated, Geany will
746 unfold all nested fold points below the current one if they are already
747 folded (when clicking on a [+] symbol).
748 When clicking on a [-] symbol, Geany will fold all nested fold points
749 below the current one if they are unfolded.
751 This option can be inverted by pressing the Shift
752 key while clicking on a fold symbol. That means, if the "Fold/Unfold all
753 children of a fold point" option is enabled, pressing Shift will disable
754 it for this click and vice versa.
757 Column mode editing (rectangular selections)
758 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
760 There is basic support for column mode editing. To use it, create a
761 rectangular selection by holding down the Control and Shift keys
762 (or Alt and Shift on Windows) while selecting some text.
763 Once a rectangular selection exists you can start editing the text within
764 this selection and the modifications will be done for every line in the
767 It is also possible to create a zero-column selection - this is
768 useful to insert text on multiple lines.
770 Drag and drop of text
771 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
773 If you drag selected text in the editor widget of Geany the text is
774 moved to the position where the mouse pointer is when releasing the
775 mouse button. Holding Control when releasing the mouse button will
776 copy the text instead. This behaviour was changed in Geany 0.11 -
777 before the selected text was copied to the new position.
783 Geany allows each document to indent either with a tab character,
784 multiple spaces or a combination of both.
786 The *Tabs* setting indents with one tab character per indent level, and
787 displays tabs as the indent width.
789 The *Spaces* setting indents with the number of spaces set in the indent
790 width for each level.
792 The *Tabs and Spaces* setting indents with spaces as above, then converts
793 as many spaces as it can to tab characters at the rate of one tab for
794 each multiple of the `Various preference` setting
795 *indent_hard_tab_width* (default 8) and displays tabs as the
796 *indent_hard_tab_width* value.
798 The default indent settings are set in `Editor Indentation
799 preferences`_ (see the link for more information).
801 The default settings can be overridden per-document using the
802 Document menu. They can also be overridden by projects - see
803 `Project management`_.
805 The indent mode for the current document is shown on the status bar
809 Indent with Tab characters.
813 Indent with tabs and spaces, depending on how much indentation is
816 Applying new indentation settings
817 `````````````````````````````````
818 After changing the default settings you may wish to apply the new
819 settings to every document in the current session. To do this use the
820 *Project->Apply Default Indentation* menu item.
822 Detecting indent type
823 `````````````````````
824 The *Detect from file* indentation preference can be used to
825 scan each file as it's opened and set the indent type based on
826 how many lines start with a tab vs. 2 or more spaces.
832 When enabled, auto-indentation happens when pressing *Enter* in the
833 Editor. It adds a certain amount of indentation to the new line so the
834 user doesn't always have to indent each line manually.
836 Geany has four types of auto-indentation:
839 Disables auto-indentation completely.
841 Adds the same amount of whitespace on a new line as on the previous line.
842 For the *Tabs* and the *Spaces* indent types the indentation will use the
843 same combination of characters as the previous line. The
844 *Tabs and Spaces* indentation type converts as explained above.
846 Does the same as *Basic* but also indents a new line after an opening
847 brace '{', and de-indents when typing a closing brace '}'. For Python,
848 a new line will be indented after typing ':' at the end of the
851 Similar to *Current chars* but the closing brace will be aligned to
852 match the indentation of the line with the opening brace. This
853 requires the filetype to be one where Geany knows that the Scintilla
854 lexer understands matching braces (C, C++, D, HTML, Pascal, Bash,
857 There is also XML-tag auto-indentation. This is enabled when the
858 mode is more than just Basic, and is also controlled by a filetype
859 setting - see `xml_indent_tags`_.
865 Geany provides a handy bookmarking feature that lets you mark one
866 or more lines in a document, and return the cursor to them using a
869 To place a mark on a line, either left-mouse-click in the left margin
870 of the editor window, or else use Ctrl-m. This will
871 produce a small green plus symbol in the margin. You can have as many
872 marks in a document as you like. Click again (or use Ctrl-m again)
873 to remove the bookmark. To remove all the marks in a given document,
874 use "Remove Markers" in the Document menu.
876 To navigate down your document, jumping from one mark to the next,
877 use Ctrl-. (control period). To go in the opposite direction on
878 the page, use Ctrl-, (control comma). Using the bookmarking feature
879 together with the commands to switch from one editor tab to another
880 (Ctrl-PgUp/PgDn and Ctrl-Tab) provides a particularly fast way to
881 navigate around multiple files.
884 Code navigation history
885 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
887 To ease navigation in source files and especially between
888 different files, Geany lets you jump between different navigation
889 points. Currently, this works for the following:
891 * `Go to symbol declaration`_
892 * `Go to symbol definition`_
897 When using one of these actions, Geany remembers your current position
898 and jumps to the new one. If you decide to go back to your previous
899 position in the file, just use "Navigate back a location". To
900 get back to the new position again, just use "Navigate forward a
901 location". This makes it easier to navigate in e.g. foreign code
902 and between different files.
905 Sending text through custom commands
906 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
908 You can define several custom commands in Geany and send the current
909 selection to one of these commands using the *Edit->Format->Send
910 Selection to* menu or keybindings. The output of the command will be
911 used to replace the current selection. This makes it possible to use
912 text formatting tools with Geany in a general way.
914 The selected text will be sent to the standard input of the executed
915 command, so the command should be able to read from it and it should
916 print all results to its standard output which will be read by
917 Geany. To help finding errors in executing the command, the output
918 of the program's standard error will be printed on Geany's standard
921 If there is no selection, the whole current line is used instead.
923 To add a custom command, use the *Send Selection to->Set Custom
924 Commands* menu item. Click on *Add* to get a new item and type the
925 command. You can also specify some command line options. Empty
926 commands are not saved.
928 Normal shell quoting is supported, so you can do things like:
930 * ``sed 's/\./(dot)/g'``
932 The above example would normally be done with the `Replace all`_
933 function, but it can be handy to have common commands already set up.
935 Note that the command is not run in a shell, so if you want to use
936 shell features like pipes and command chains, you need to explicitly
937 launch the shell and pass it your command:
939 * ``sh -c 'sort | uniq'``
945 You can execute the context action command on the current word at the
946 cursor position or the available selection. This word or selection
947 can be used as an argument to the command.
948 The context action is invoked by a menu entry in the popup menu of the
949 editor and also a keyboard shortcut (see the section called
952 The command can be specified in the preferences dialog and also for
953 each filetype (see "context_action_cmd" in the section called
954 `Filetype configuration`_). When the context action is invoked, the filetype
955 specific command is used if available, otherwise the command
956 specified in the preferences dialog is executed.
958 The current word or selection can be referred with the wildcard "%s"
959 in the command, it will be replaced by the current word or
960 selection before the command is executed.
962 For example a context action can be used to open API documentation
963 in a browser window, the command to open the PHP API documentation
966 firefox "https://www.php.net/%s"
968 when executing the command, the %s is substituted by the word near
969 the cursor position or by the current selection. If the cursor is at
970 the word "echo", a browser window will open(assumed your browser is
971 called firefox) and it will open the address: https://www.php.net/echo.
977 Geany can offer a list of possible completions for symbols defined in the
978 tags files and for all words in open documents.
980 The autocompletion list for symbols is presented when the first few
981 characters of the symbol are typed (configurable, see `Editor Completions
982 preferences`_, default 4) or when the *Complete word*
983 keybinding is pressed (configurable, see `Editor keybindings`_,
986 For some languages the autocompletion list is ordered by heuristics to
987 attempt to show names that are more likely to be what the user wants
988 close to the top of the list.
990 When the defined keybinding is typed and the *Autocomplete all words in
991 document* preference (in `Editor Completions preferences`_)
992 is selected then the autocompletion list will show all matching words
993 in the document, if there are no matching symbols.
995 If you don't want to use autocompletion it can be dismissed until
996 the next symbol by pressing Escape. The autocompletion list is updated
997 as more characters are typed so that it only shows completions that start
998 with the characters typed so far. If no symbols begin with the sequence,
999 the autocompletion window is closed.
1001 The up and down arrows will move the selected item. The highlighted
1002 item on the autocompletion list can be chosen from the list by pressing
1003 Enter/Return. You can also double-click to select an item. The sequence
1004 will be completed to match the chosen item, and if the *Drop rest of
1005 word on completion* preference is set (in `Editor Completions
1006 preferences`_) then any characters after the cursor that match
1007 a symbol or word are deleted.
1009 Word part completion
1010 ````````````````````
1011 By default, pressing Tab will complete the selected item by word part;
1012 useful e.g. for adding the prefix ``gtk_combo_box_entry_`` without typing it
1017 * gtk_combo_box_<e><TAB>
1018 * gtk_combo_box_entry_<s><ENTER>
1019 * gtk_combo_box_entry_set_text_column
1021 The key combination can be changed from Tab - See `Editor keybindings`_.
1022 If you clear/change the key combination for word part completion, Tab
1023 will complete the whole word instead, like Enter.
1025 Scope autocompletion
1026 ````````````````````
1035 When you type ``foo.`` it will show an autocompletion list with 'i' and
1038 It only works for languages that set parent scope names for e.g. struct
1039 members. Most languages only parse global definitions and so scope
1040 autocompletion will not work for names declared in local scope
1041 (e.g. inside functions). A few languages parse both local and global
1042 symbols (e.g. C/C++ parsers) and for these parsers scope autocompletion
1043 works also for local variables.
1048 A handy tooltip is shown when typing ``(`` after a symbol name when the
1049 symbol has a parameter list. The tag parser for the filetype must support
1050 parsing parameter lists.
1051 Calltips can also be shown with a `keybinding <#editor-keybindings>`_.
1053 When there is more than one matching symbol, arrows are shown which can
1054 be clicked to cycle through the signatures.
1057 User-definable snippets
1058 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1060 Snippets are small strings or code constructs which can be replaced or
1061 completed to a more complex string. So you can save a lot of time when
1062 typing common strings and letting Geany do the work for you.
1063 To know what to complete or replace Geany reads a configuration file
1064 called ``snippets.conf`` at startup.
1066 Maybe you need to often type your name, so define a snippet like this::
1069 myname=Enrico Tröger
1071 Every time you write ``myname`` <TAB> in Geany, it will replace "myname"
1072 with "Enrico Tröger". The key to start autocompletion can be changed
1073 in the preferences dialog, by default it is TAB. The corresponding keybinding
1074 is called `Complete snippet`.
1078 You can override the default snippets using the user
1079 ``snippets.conf`` file. Use the *Tools->Configuration
1080 Files->snippets.conf* menu item. See also `Configuration file paths`_.
1082 This adds the default settings to the user file if the file doesn't
1083 exist. Alternatively the file can be created manually, adding only
1084 the settings you want to change. All missing settings will be read
1085 from the system snippets file.
1089 The file ``snippets.conf`` contains sections defining snippets that
1090 are available for particular filetypes and in general.
1092 The two sections "Default" and "Special" apply to all filetypes.
1093 "Default" contains all snippets which are available for every
1094 filetype and "Special" contains snippets which can only be used in
1095 other snippets. So you can define often used parts of snippets and
1096 just use the special snippet as a placeholder (see the
1097 ``snippets.conf`` for details).
1099 You can define sections with the name of a filetype eg "C++". The
1100 snippets in that section are only available for use in files with that
1101 filetype. Snippets in filetype sections will hide snippets with the
1102 same name in the "Default" section when used in a file of that
1105 **Substitution sequences for snippets**
1107 To define snippets you can use several special character sequences which
1108 will be replaced when using the snippet:
1110 ================ =========================================================
1111 \\n or %newline% Insert a new line (it will be replaced by the used EOL
1112 char(s): LF, CR/LF, or CR).
1114 \\t or %ws% Insert an indentation step, it will be replaced according
1115 to the current document's indent mode.
1117 \\s \\s to force whitespace at beginning or end of a value
1118 ('key= value' won't work, use 'key=\\svalue')
1120 %cursor% Place the cursor at this position after completion has
1121 been done. You can define multiple %cursor% wildcards
1122 and use the keybinding `Move cursor in snippet` to jump
1123 to the next defined cursor position in the completed
1126 %...% "..." means the name of a key in the "Special" section.
1127 If you have defined a key "brace_open" in the "Special"
1128 section you can use %brace_open% in any other snippet.
1129 ================ =========================================================
1131 Snippet names must not contain spaces otherwise they won't
1132 work correctly. But beside that you can define almost any
1133 string as a snippet and use it later in Geany. It is not limited
1134 to existing constructs of certain programming languages(like ``if``,
1135 ``for``, ``switch``). Define whatever you need.
1137 **Template wildcards**
1139 Since Geany 0.15 you can also use most of the available templates wildcards
1140 listed in `Template wildcards`_. All wildcards which are listed as
1141 `available in snippets` can be used. For instance to improve the above example::
1144 myname=My name is {developer}
1145 mysystem=My system: {command:uname -a}
1147 this will replace ``myname`` with "My name is " and the value of the template
1148 preference ``developer``.
1152 You can change the way Geany recognizes the word to complete,
1153 that is how the start and end of a word is recognised when the
1154 snippet completion is requested. The section "Special" may
1155 contain a key "wordchars" which lists all characters a string may contain
1156 to be recognized as a word for completion. Leave it commented to use
1157 default characters or define it to add or remove characters to fit your
1163 Normally you would type the snippet name and press Tab. However, you
1164 can define keybindings for snippets under the *Keybindings* group in
1169 block_cursor=<Ctrl>8
1172 Snippet keybindings may be overridden by Geany's configurable
1176 Inserting Unicode characters
1177 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1179 You can insert Unicode code points by hitting Ctrl-Shift-u, then still holding
1180 Ctrl-Shift, type some hex digits representing the code point for the character
1181 you want and hit Enter or Return (still holding Ctrl-Shift). If you release
1182 Ctrl-Shift before hitting Enter or Return (or any other character), the code
1183 insertion is completed, but the typed character is also entered. In the case
1184 of Enter/Return, it is a newline, as you might expect.
1187 In some earlier versions of Geany, you might need to first unbind Ctrl-Shift-u
1188 in the `keybinding preferences`_, then select *Tools->Reload Configuration*
1189 or restart Geany. Note that it works slightly differently from other GTK
1190 applications, in that you'll need to continue to hold down the Ctrl and Shift
1191 keys while typing the code point hex digits (and the Enter or Return to finish the code point).
1194 Inserting color values
1195 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1197 You can insert a color value by selecting *Tools->Color Chooser* from the menu.
1198 A dialog appears to select the wanted color. If the cursor is placed inside a
1199 *#RRGGBB* format color value then the dialog will show that color after opening.
1200 On clicking on *Apply* or *Select* the code for the chosen color will be inserted
1201 in the format *#RRGGBB*. If text is selected, then it will be replaced with the
1202 color code on the first click on *Apply* or *Select*. If no text is selected or
1203 on subsequent clicks the color code is inserted at the current cursor position.
1206 Search, replace and go to
1207 -------------------------
1209 This section describes search-related commands from the Search menu
1210 and the editor window's popup menu:
1217 * Go to symbol definition
1218 * Go to symbol declaration
1221 See also `Search`_ preferences.
1225 There are also two toolbar entries:
1230 There are keybindings to focus each of these - see `Focus
1231 keybindings`_. Pressing Escape will then focus the editor.
1235 The quickest way to find some text is to use the search bar entry in
1236 the toolbar. This performs a case-insensitive search in the current
1237 document whilst you type. Pressing Enter will search again, and pressing
1238 Shift-Enter will search backwards.
1243 The Find dialog is used for finding text in one or more open documents.
1245 .. image:: ./images/find_dialog.png
1251 The syntax for the *Use regular expressions* option is shown in
1252 `Regular expressions`_.
1255 *Use escape sequences* is implied for regular expressions.
1257 The *Use multi-line matching* option enables multi-line regular
1258 expressions instead of single-line ones. See `Regular expressions`_ for
1259 more details on the differences between the two modes.
1261 The *Use escape sequences* option will transform any escaped characters
1262 into their UTF-8 equivalent. For example, \\t will be transformed into
1263 a tab character. Other recognized symbols are: \\\\, \\n, \\r, \\uXXXX
1264 (Unicode characters).
1270 To find all matches, click on the Find All expander. This will reveal
1277 Find All In Document will show a list of matching lines in the
1278 current document in the Messages tab of the Message Window. *Find All
1279 In Session* does the same for all open documents.
1281 Mark will highlight all matches in the current document with a
1282 colored box. These markers can be removed by selecting the
1283 Remove Markers command from the Document menu.
1286 Change font in search dialog text fields
1287 ````````````````````````````````````````
1289 All search related dialogs use a Monospace font for the text input fields to
1290 increase the readability of input text. This is useful when you are
1291 typing input such as regular expressions with spaces, periods and commas which
1292 might be hard to read with a proportional font.
1294 If you want to change the font, you can do this easily by using the following
1295 custom CSS snippet, see `Customizing Geany's appearance using GTK+ CSS`_::
1297 #GeanyDialogSearch GtkEntry /* GTK < 3.20 */,
1298 #GeanyDialogSearch entry /* GTK >= 3.20 */ {
1299 font: 8pt monospace;
1305 The *Find Next/Previous Selection* commands perform a search for the
1306 current selected text. If nothing is selected, by default the current
1307 word is used instead. This can be customized by the
1308 *find_selection_type* preference - see `Various preferences`_.
1310 ===== =============================================
1311 Value *find_selection_type* behaviour
1312 ===== =============================================
1313 0 Use the current word (default).
1314 1 Try the X selection first, then current word.
1315 2 Repeat last search.
1316 ===== =============================================
1322 *Find Usage* searches all open files. It is similar to the *Find All In
1323 Session* option in the Find dialog.
1325 If there is a selection, then it is used as the search text; otherwise
1326 the current word is used. The current word is either taken from the
1327 word nearest the edit cursor, or the word underneath the popup menu
1328 click position when the popup menu is used. The search results are
1329 shown in the Messages tab of the Message Window.
1332 You can also use Find Usage for symbol list items from the popup
1339 *Find in Files* is a more powerful version of *Find Usage* that searches
1340 all files in a certain directory using the Grep tool. The Grep tool
1341 must be correctly set in Preferences to the path of the system's Grep
1342 utility. GNU Grep is recommended (see note below).
1344 .. image:: ./images/find_in_files_dialog.png
1346 The *Search* field is initially set to the current word in the editor
1347 (depending on `Search`_ preferences).
1349 The *Files* setting allows to choose which files are included in the
1350 search, depending on the mode:
1353 Search in all files;
1355 Use the current project's patterns, see `Project properties`_;
1357 Use custom patterns.
1359 Both project and custom patterns use a glob-style syntax, each
1360 pattern separated by a space. To search all ``.c`` and ``.h`` files,
1362 Note that an empty pattern list searches in all files rather
1365 The *Directory* field is initially set to the current document's directory,
1366 unless this field has already been edited and the current document has
1367 not changed. Otherwise, the current document's directory is prepended to
1368 the drop-down history. This can be disabled - see `Search`_ preferences.
1370 The *Encoding* field can be used to define the encoding of the files
1371 to be searched. The entered search text is converted to the chosen encoding
1372 and the search results are converted back to UTF-8.
1374 The *Extra options* field is used to pass any additional arguments to
1378 The *Files* setting uses ``--include=`` when searching recursively,
1379 *Recurse in subfolders* uses ``-r``; both are GNU Grep options and may
1380 not work with other Grep implementations.
1383 Filtering out version control files
1384 ```````````````````````````````````
1386 When using the *Recurse in subfolders* option with a directory that's
1387 under version control, you can set the *Extra options* field to filter
1388 out version control files.
1390 If you have GNU Grep >= 2.5.2 you can use the ``--exclude-dir``
1391 argument to filter out CVS and hidden directories like ``.svn``.
1393 Example: ``--exclude-dir=.svn --exclude-dir=CVS``
1395 If you have an older Grep, you can try using the ``--exclude`` flag
1396 to filter out filenames.
1398 SVN Example: ``--exclude=*.svn-base``
1400 The --exclude argument only matches the file name part, not the path.
1406 The Replace dialog is used for replacing text in one or more open
1409 .. image:: ./images/replace_dialog.png
1411 The Replace dialog has the same options for matching text as the Find
1412 dialog. See the section `Matching options`_.
1414 The *Use regular expressions* option allows regular expressions to
1415 be used in the search string and back references in the replacement
1416 text -- see the entry for '\\n' in `Regular expressions`_.
1421 To replace several matches, click on the *Replace All* expander. This
1422 will reveal several options:
1428 *Replace All In Document* will replace all matching text in the
1429 current document. *Replace All In Session* does the same for all open
1430 documents. *Replace All In Selection* will replace all matching text
1431 in the current selection of the current document.
1434 Go to symbol definition
1435 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1437 If the current word or selection is the name of a symbol definition
1438 (e.g. a function name) and the file containing the symbol definition is
1439 open, this command will switch to that file and go to the
1440 corresponding line number. The current word is either the word
1441 nearest the edit cursor, or the word underneath the popup menu click
1442 position when the popup menu is used.
1444 If there are more symbols with the same name to which the goto can be performed,
1445 a pop up is shown with a list of all the occurrences. After selecting a symbol
1446 from the list Geany jumps to the corresponding symbol location. Geany tries to
1447 suggest the nearest symbol (symbol from the current file, other open documents
1448 or current directory) as the best candidate for the goto and places this symbol
1449 at the beginning of the list typed in boldface.
1452 If the corresponding symbol is on the current line, Geany will first
1453 look for a symbol declaration instead, as this is more useful.
1454 Likewise *Go to symbol declaration* will search for a symbol definition
1455 first in this case also.
1458 Go to symbol declaration
1459 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1461 Like *Go to symbol definition*, but for a forward declaration such as a
1462 C function prototype or ``extern`` declaration instead of a function
1469 Go to a particular line number in the current file.
1475 You can use regular expressions in the Find and Replace dialogs
1476 by selecting the *Use regular expressions* check box (see `Matching
1477 options`_). The syntax is Perl compatible. Basic syntax is described
1478 in the table below. For full details, see
1479 https://www.geany.org/manual/gtk/glib/glib-regex-syntax.html.
1481 By default regular expressions are matched on a line-by-line basis.
1482 If you are interested in multi-line regular expressions, matched against
1483 the whole buffer at once, see the section `Multi-line regular expressions`_
1487 1. The *Use escape sequences* dialog option always applies for regular
1489 2. Searching backwards with regular expressions is not supported.
1490 3. The *Use multi-line matching* dialog option to select single or
1491 multi-line matching.
1493 **In a regular expression, the following characters are interpreted:**
1495 ======= ============================================================
1496 . Matches any character.
1498 ( This marks the start of a region for tagging a match.
1500 ) This marks the end of a tagged region.
1502 \\n Where n is 1 through 9 refers to the first through ninth tagged
1503 region when searching or replacing.
1505 Searching for (Wiki)\\1 matches WikiWiki.
1507 If the search string was Fred([1-9])XXX and the
1508 replace string was Sam\\1YYY, when applied to Fred2XXX this
1509 would generate Sam2YYY.
1511 \\0 When replacing, the whole matching text.
1513 \\b This matches a word boundary.
1515 \\c A backslash followed by d, D, s, S, w or W, becomes a
1516 character class (both inside and outside sets []).
1519 * D: any char except decimal digits
1520 * s: whitespace (space, \\t \\n \\r \\f \\v)
1521 * S: any char except whitespace (see above)
1522 * w: alphanumeric & underscore
1523 * W: any char except alphanumeric & underscore
1525 \\x This allows you to use a character x that would otherwise have
1526 a special meaning. For example, \\[ would be interpreted as [
1527 and not as the start of a character set. Use \\\\ for a literal
1530 [...] Matches one of the characters in the set. If the first
1531 character in the set is ^, it matches the characters NOT in
1532 the set, i.e. complements the set. A shorthand S-E (start
1533 dash end) is used to specify a set of characters S up to E,
1536 The special characters ] and - have no special
1537 meaning if they appear first in the set. - can also be last
1538 in the set. To include both, put ] first: []A-Z-].
1542 []|-] matches these 3 chars
1543 []-|] matches from ] to | chars
1544 [a-z] any lowercase alpha
1545 [^]-] any char except - and ]
1546 [^A-Z] any char except uppercase alpha
1549 ^ This matches the start of a line (unless used inside a set, see
1552 $ This matches the end of a line.
1554 \* This matches 0 or more times. For example, Sa*m matches Sm, Sam,
1555 Saam, Saaam and so on.
1557 \+ This matches 1 or more times. For example, Sa+m matches Sam,
1558 Saam, Saaam and so on.
1560 \? This matches 0 or 1 time(s). For example, Joh?n matches John, Jon.
1561 ======= ============================================================
1564 This table is adapted from Scintilla and SciTE documentation,
1565 distributed under the `License for Scintilla and SciTE`_.
1568 Multi-line regular expressions
1569 ``````````````````````````````
1572 The *Use multi-line matching* dialog option enables multi-line
1573 regular expressions.
1575 Multi-line regular expressions work just like single-line ones but a
1576 match can span several lines.
1578 While the syntax is the same, a few practical differences applies:
1580 ======= ============================================================
1581 . Matches any character but newlines. This behavior can be changed
1582 to also match newlines using the (?s) option, see
1583 https://www.geany.org/manual/gtk/glib/glib-regex-syntax.html#idp5671632
1585 [^...] A negative range (see above) *will* match newlines if they are
1586 not explicitly listed in that negative range. For example, range
1587 [^a-z] will match newlines, while range [^a-z\\r\\n] won't.
1588 While this is the expected behavior, it can lead to tricky
1589 problems if one doesn't think about it when writing an expression.
1590 ======= ============================================================
1595 The View menu allows various elements of the main window to be shown
1596 or hidden, and also provides various display-related editor options.
1598 Color schemes dialog
1599 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1600 The Color Schemes dialog is available under the *View->Change Color Scheme*
1601 menu item. It lists various color schemes for editor highlighting
1602 styles, including the default scheme first. Other items are available
1603 based on what color scheme files Geany found at startup.
1605 Color scheme files are read from the `Configuration file paths`_ under
1606 the ``colorschemes`` subdirectory. They should have the extension
1607 ``.conf``. The default color scheme
1608 is read from ``filetypes.common``.
1610 The `[named_styles] section`_ and `[named_colors] section`_ are the
1611 same as for ``filetypes.common``.
1613 The ``[theme_info]`` section can contain information about the
1614 theme. The ``name`` and ``description`` keys are read to set the
1615 menu item text and tooltip, respectively. These keys can have
1616 translations, e.g.::
1622 Symbols and tags files
1623 ----------------------
1625 Upon opening, files of supported filetypes are parsed to extract the symbol
1626 information (aka "workspace symbols"). You can also have Geany automatically
1627 load external files containing the symbol information (aka "global
1628 tags files") upon startup, or manually using *Tools --> Load Tags File*.
1630 Geany uses its own tags file format, similar to what ``ctags`` uses
1631 (but is incompatible with ctags). You use Geany to generate global
1632 tags files, as described below.
1638 Each document is parsed for symbols whenever a file is loaded, saved or
1639 modified (see *Symbol list update frequency* preference in the `Editor
1640 Completions preferences`_). These are shown in the Symbol list in the
1641 Sidebar. These symbols are also used for autocompletion and calltips
1642 for all documents open in the current session that have the same filetype.
1644 The *Go to Symbol* commands can be used with all workspace symbols. See
1645 `Go to symbol definition`_.
1651 Global tags files are used to provide symbols for autocompletion and calltips
1652 without having to open the source files containing these symbols. This is intended
1653 for library APIs, as the tags file only has to be updated when you upgrade
1656 You can load a custom global tags file in two ways:
1658 * Using the *Load Tags File* command in the Tools menu.
1659 * By moving or symlinking tags files to the ``tags`` subdirectory of
1660 one of the `configuration file paths`_ before starting Geany.
1662 You can either download these files or generate your own. They have
1667 *lang_ext* is one of the extensions set for the filetype associated
1668 with the tags parser. See the section called `Filetype extensions`_ for
1672 Default global tags files
1673 `````````````````````````
1675 Some global tags files are distributed with Geany and will be loaded
1676 automatically when the corresponding filetype is first used. Currently
1677 this includes global tags files for these languages:
1682 * HTML -- &symbol; completion, e.g. for ampersand, copyright, etc.
1687 Global tags file format
1688 ```````````````````````
1690 Global tags files can have three different formats:
1693 * Pipe-separated format
1696 Tag files using the CTags format should be left unmodified in the
1697 form generated by the ctags command-line tool.
1699 For the pipe-separated or tagmanager format, the first line of global tag files
1700 should be a comment, introduced by ``#`` followed by a space and
1701 ``format=pipe`` or ``format=tagmanager``, respectively; these are
1702 case-sensitive. This helps Geany to read the file properly. If this
1703 line is missing, Geany tries to auto-detect the format used but this
1709 This is the recommended tags file format, generated by the ctags command-line
1710 tool from the universal-ctags project (https://github.com/universal-ctags/ctags).
1711 This format is compatible with the format historically used by Vi.
1713 The format is described at https://ctags.sourceforge.net/FORMAT, but
1714 for the full list of existing extensions please refer to universal-ctags.
1715 However, note that Geany may actually only honor a subset of the
1716 existing extensions.
1719 Pipe-separated format
1720 *********************
1721 The Pipe-separated format is easier to read and write.
1722 There is one symbol per line and different symbol attributes are separated
1723 by the pipe character (``|``). A line looks like::
1725 basename|string|(string path [, string suffix])|
1727 | The first field is the symbol name (usually a function name).
1728 | The second field is the type of the return value.
1729 | The third field is the argument list for this symbol.
1730 | The fourth field is the description for this symbol but
1731 currently unused and should be left empty.
1733 Except for the first field (symbol name), all other field can be left
1734 empty but the pipe separator must appear for them.
1736 You can easily write your own global tags files using this format.
1737 Just save them in your tags directory, as described earlier in the
1738 section `Global tags files`_.
1743 The Tagmanager format is a bit more complex and is used for files
1744 created by the ``geany -g`` command. There is one symbol per line.
1745 Different symbol attributes like the return value or the argument list
1746 are separated with different characters indicating the type of the
1750 Generating a global tags file
1751 `````````````````````````````
1753 Generating tags files using ctags
1754 *********************************
1755 This is currently the recommended way of generating tags files. Unlike the
1756 methods below which use the Geany binary for their generation, this method
1757 should produce tags files which are compatible across Geany releases, starting
1760 Geany supports loading tag files generated using the ``ctags`` command-line
1761 tool from the universal-ctags project (https://github.com/universal-ctags/ctags).
1762 Even though Geany should work with any ctags file, it is recommended to use
1763 certain fields to give Geany some additional information. The recommended fields
1764 are ``EfiklsZSt``, so to generate symbols for all sources in the my_project
1765 directory one can use::
1767 ctags -n --fields=EfiklsZSt -R -o my_project.c.tags my_project
1769 Additional options may be given to the ``ctags`` tool, for instance, to restrict
1770 the generated tags file to some languages only, use certain tag kinds, etc.
1772 Note that when the ``l`` field (specifying the programming language) is enabled,
1773 the language of all symbols is set based on the value of this field instead of
1774 the language specified in the extension of the tags file. You however still
1775 have to name the file according to the same rules regardless of whether the
1776 ``l`` field is used or not.
1779 Generating tags files using Geany
1780 *********************************
1781 You can generate your own global tags files by parsing a list of
1782 source files. The command is::
1784 geany -g [-P] <Tags File> <File list>
1786 * Tags File filename should be in the format described earlier --
1787 see the section called `Global tags files`_.
1788 * File list is a list of filenames, each with a full path (unless
1789 you are generating C/C++ tags files and have set the CFLAGS environment
1790 variable appropriately).
1791 * ``-P`` or ``--no-preprocessing`` disables using the C pre-processor
1792 to process ``#include`` directives for C/C++ source files. Use this
1793 option if you want to specify each source file on the command-line
1794 instead of using a 'master' header file. Also can be useful if you
1795 don't want to specify the CFLAGS environment variable.
1797 Example for the wxD library for the D programming language::
1799 geany -g wxd.d.tags /home/username/wxd/wx/*.d
1802 Generating C/C++ tags files using Geany
1803 ***************************************
1804 You may need to first setup the `C ignore.tags`_ file.
1806 For C/C++ tags files gcc is required by default, so that header files
1807 can be preprocessed to include any other headers they depend upon. If
1808 you do not want this, use the ``-P`` option described above.
1810 For preprocessing, the environment variable CFLAGS should be set with
1811 appropriate ``-I/path`` include paths. The following example works with
1812 the bash shell, generating a tags file for the GnomeUI library::
1814 CFLAGS=`pkg-config --cflags libgnomeui-2.0` geany -g gnomeui.c.tags \
1815 /usr/include/libgnomeui-2.0/gnome.h
1817 You can adapt this command to use CFLAGS and header files appropriate
1818 for whichever libraries you want.
1821 Generating tags files on Windows using Geany
1822 ********************************************
1823 This works basically the same as on other platforms::
1825 "c:\program files\geany\bin\geany" -g c:\mytags.php.tags c:\code\somefile.php
1831 You can ignore certain symbols for C-based languages if they would lead
1832 to wrong parsing of the code. Use the *Tools->Configuration
1833 Files->ignore.tags* menu item to open the user ``ignore.tags`` file.
1834 See also `Configuration file paths`_.
1836 List all symbol names you want to ignore in this file, separated by spaces
1841 G_GNUC_NULL_TERMINATED
1843 G_GNUC_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT
1846 This will ignore the above macros and will correctly detect 'Foo' as a type
1847 instead of 'BAR' in the following code:
1849 ``struct Foo BAR { int i; };``
1851 In addition, it is possible to specify macro definition similarly to the
1854 <macro>=<definition>
1855 Defines a C preprocessor <macro>. This emulates the behavior of
1856 the corresponding gcc option. All types of macros are supported,
1857 including the ones with parameters and variable arguments.
1858 Stringification, token pasting and recursive macro expansion are
1861 For even more detailed information please read the manual page of
1868 You may adjust Geany's settings using the Edit --> Preferences
1869 dialog. Any changes you make there can be applied by hitting either
1870 the Apply or the OK button. These settings will persist between Geany
1871 sessions. Note that most settings here have descriptive popup bubble
1872 help -- just hover the mouse over the item in question to get help
1875 You may also adjust some View settings (under the View menu) that
1876 persist between Geany sessions. The settings under the Document menu,
1877 however, are only for the current document and revert to defaults
1878 when restarting Geany.
1881 In the paragraphs that follow, the text describing a dialog tab
1882 comes after the screenshot of that tab.
1885 General Startup preferences
1886 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1888 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_gen_startup.png
1893 Load files from the last session
1894 On startup, load the same files you had open the last time you
1897 Load virtual terminal support
1898 Load the library for running a terminal in the message window area.
1900 Enable plugin support
1901 Allow plugins to be used in Geany.
1905 Save window position and geometry
1906 Save the current position and size of the main window so next time
1907 you open Geany it's in the same location.
1910 Have a dialog pop up to confirm that you really want to quit Geany.
1916 Path to start in when opening or saving files.
1917 It must be an absolute path.
1920 Path to start in when opening project files.
1923 By default Geany looks in the system installation and the user
1924 configuration - see `Plugins`_. In addition the path entered here will be
1926 Usually you do not need to set an additional path to search for
1927 plugins. It might be useful when Geany is installed on a multi-user machine
1928 and additional plugins are available in a common location for all users.
1929 Leave blank to not set an additional lookup path.
1932 General Miscellaneous preferences
1933 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1935 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_gen_misc.png
1940 Beep on errors when compilation has finished
1941 Have the computer make a beeping sound when compilation of your program
1942 has completed or any errors occurred.
1944 Switch status message list at new message
1945 Switch to the status message tab (in the notebook window at the bottom)
1946 once a new status message arrives.
1948 Suppress status messages in the status bar
1949 Remove all messages from the status bar. The messages are still displayed
1950 in the status messages window.
1953 Another option is to use the *Switch to Editor* keybinding - it
1954 reshows the document statistics on the status bar. See `Focus
1957 Auto-focus widgets (focus follows mouse)
1958 Give the focus automatically to widgets below the mouse cursor.
1959 This works for the main editor widget, the scribble, the toolbar search field
1960 go to line fields and the VTE.
1966 Always wrap search around the document when finding a match.
1968 Hide the Find dialog
1969 Hide the `Find`_ dialog after clicking Find Next/Previous.
1971 Use the current word under the cursor for Find dialogs
1972 Use current word under the cursor when opening the Find, Find in Files or Replace dialog and
1973 there is no selection. When this option is disabled, the search term last used in the
1974 appropriate Find dialog is used.
1976 Use the current file's directory for Find in Files
1977 When opening the Find in Files dialog, set the directory to search to the directory of the current
1978 active file. When this option is disabled, the directory of the last use of the Find in Files
1979 dialog is used. See `Find in Files`_ for details.
1984 Use project-based session files
1985 Save your current session when closing projects. You will be able to
1986 resume different project sessions, automatically opening the files
1987 you had open previously.
1989 Store project file inside the project base directory
1990 When creating new projects, the default path for the project file contains
1991 the project base path. Without this option enabled, the default project file
1992 path is one level above the project base path.
1993 In either case, you can easily set the final project file path in the
1994 *New Project* dialog. This option provides the more common
1995 defaults automatically for convenience.
1998 Interface preferences
1999 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2001 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_interface_interface.png
2007 Whether to show the sidebar at all.
2010 Show the list of functions, variables, and other information in the
2011 current document you are editing.
2014 Show all the documents you have open currently. This can be used to
2015 change between documents (see `Switching between documents`_) and
2016 to perform some common operations such as saving, closing and reloading.
2019 Whether to place the sidebar on the left or right of the editor window.
2025 Whether to place the message window on the bottom or right of the editor window.
2031 Change the font used to display documents.
2034 Change the font used for the Symbols sidebar tab.
2037 Change the font used for the message window area.
2043 Show the status bar at the bottom of the main window. It gives information about
2044 the file you are editing like the line and column you are on, whether any
2045 modifications were done, the file encoding, the filetype and other information.
2047 Interface Notebook tab preferences
2048 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2050 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_interface_notebook.png
2056 Show a notebook tab for all documents so you can switch between them
2057 using the mouse (instead of using the Documents window).
2060 Make each tab show a close button so you can easily close open
2063 Placement of new file tabs
2064 Whether to create a document with its notebook tab to the left or
2065 right of all existing tabs.
2068 Whether to place file tabs next to the current tab
2069 rather than at the edges of the notebook.
2071 Double-clicking hides all additional widgets
2072 Whether to call the View->Toggle All Additional Widgets command
2073 when double-clicking on a notebook tab.
2076 If filenames are long, set the number of characters that should be
2077 visible on each tab's label.
2083 Set the positioning of the editor's notebook tabs to the right,
2084 left, top, or bottom of the editing window.
2087 Set the positioning of the sidebar's notebook tabs to the right,
2088 left, top, or bottom of the sidebar window.
2091 Set the positioning of the message window's notebook tabs to the
2092 right, left, top, or bottom of the message window.
2095 Interface Toolbar preferences
2096 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2098 Affects the main toolbar underneath the menu bar.
2100 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_interface_toolbar.png
2106 Whether to show the toolbar.
2108 Append Toolbar to the Menu
2109 Allows to append the toolbar to the main menu bar instead of placing it below.
2110 This is useful to save vertical space.
2113 See `Customizing the toolbar`_.
2119 Select the toolbar icon style to use - either icons and text, just
2121 The choice System default uses whatever icon style is set by GTK.
2124 Select the size of the icons you see (large, small or very small).
2125 The choice System default uses whatever icon size is set by GTK.
2128 Editor Features preferences
2129 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2131 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_edit_features.png
2137 Show long lines wrapped around to new display lines.
2142 Whether to move the cursor to the first non-whitespace character
2143 on the line when you hit the home key on your keyboard. Pressing it
2144 again will go to the very start of the line.
2146 Disable Drag and Drop
2147 Do not allow the dragging and dropping of selected text in documents.
2150 Allow groups of lines in a document to be collapsed for easier
2153 Fold/Unfold all children of a fold point
2154 Whether to fold/unfold all child fold points when a parent line
2157 Use indicators to show compile errors
2158 Underline lines with compile errors using red squiggles to indicate
2159 them in the editor area.
2161 Newline strips trailing spaces
2162 Remove any whitespace at the end of the line when you hit the
2163 Enter/Return key. See also `Strip trailing spaces`_. Note
2164 auto indentation is calculated before stripping, so although this
2165 setting will clear a blank line, it will not set the next line
2166 indentation back to zero.
2168 Line breaking column
2169 The editor column number to insert a newline at when Line Breaking
2170 is enabled for the current document.
2172 Comment toggle marker
2173 A string which is added when toggling a line comment in a source file.
2174 It is used to mark the comment as toggled.
2177 Editor Indentation preferences
2178 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2180 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_edit_indentation.png
2185 See `Indentation`_ for more information.
2188 The width of a single indent size in spaces. By default the indent
2189 size is equivalent to 4 spaces.
2191 Detect width from file
2192 Try to detect and set the indent width based on file content, when
2196 When Geany inserts indentation, whether to use:
2200 * Tabs and Spaces, depending on how much indentation is on a line
2202 The *Tabs and Spaces* indent type is also known as *Soft tab
2203 support* in some other editors.
2205 Detect type from file
2206 Try to detect and set the indent type based on file content, when
2210 The type of auto-indentation you wish to use after pressing Enter,
2214 Just add the indentation of the previous line.
2216 Add indentation based on the current filetype and any characters at
2217 the end of the line such as ``{``, ``}`` for C, ``:`` for Python.
2219 Like *Current chars* but for C-like languages, make a closing
2220 ``}`` brace line up with the matching opening brace.
2223 If set, pressing tab will indent the current line or selection, and
2224 unindent when pressing Shift-tab. Otherwise, the tab key will
2225 insert a tab character into the document (which can be different
2226 from indentation, depending on the indent type).
2229 There are also separate configurable keybindings for indent &
2230 unindent, but this preference allows the tab key to have different
2231 meanings in different contexts - e.g. for snippet completion.
2233 Backspace key unindents
2234 If set, pressing backspace while the cursor is in leading whitespace
2235 will reduce the indentation level, unless the indentation mode is tabs.
2236 Otherwise, the backspace key will delete the character before the cursor.
2238 Editor Completions preferences
2239 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2241 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_edit_completions.png
2247 Whether to replace special keywords after typing Tab into a
2248 pre-defined text snippet.
2249 See `User-definable snippets`_.
2251 XML/HTML tag auto-closing
2252 When you open an XML/HTML tag automatically generate its
2255 Automatic continuation multi-line comments
2256 Continue automatically multi-line comments in languages like C, C++
2257 and Java when a new line is entered inside such a comment.
2258 With this option enabled, Geany will insert a ``*`` on every new line
2259 inside a multi-line comment, for example when you press return in the
2263 * This is a C multi-line comment, press <Return>
2265 then Geany would insert::
2269 on the next line with the correct indentation based on the previous line,
2270 as long as the multi-line is not closed by ``*/``. If the previous line
2271 has no ``*`` prefix, no ``*`` will be added to the new line.
2273 Autocomplete symbols
2274 When you start to type a symbol name, look for the full string to
2275 allow it to be completed for you.
2277 Autocomplete all words in document
2278 When you start to type a word, Geany will search the whole document for
2279 words starting with the typed part to complete it, assuming there
2280 are no symbol names to show.
2282 Drop rest of word on completion
2283 Remove any word part to the right of the cursor when choosing a
2284 completion list item.
2286 Characters to type for autocompletion
2287 Number of characters of a word to type before autocompletion is
2290 Completion list height
2291 The number of rows to display for the autocompletion window.
2293 Max. symbol name suggestions
2294 The maximum number of items in the autocompletion list.
2296 Symbol list update frequency
2297 The minimum delay (in milliseconds) between two symbol list updates.
2299 This option determines how frequently the symbol list is updated for the
2300 current document. The smaller the delay, the more up-to-date the symbol
2301 list (and then the completions); but rebuilding the symbol list has a
2302 cost in performance, especially with large files.
2304 The default value is 250ms, which means the symbol list will be updated
2305 at most four times per second, even if the document changes continuously.
2307 A value of 0 disables automatic updates, so the symbol list will only be
2308 updated upon document saving.
2311 Auto-close quotes and brackets
2312 ``````````````````````````````
2314 Geany can automatically insert a closing bracket and quote characters when
2315 you open them. For instance, you type a ``(`` and Geany will automatically
2316 insert ``)``. With the following options, you can define for which
2317 characters this should work.
2320 Auto-close parenthesis when typing an opening one
2323 Auto-close curly brackets (braces) when typing an opening one
2326 Auto-close square brackets when typing an opening one
2329 Auto-close single quotes when typing an opening one
2332 Auto-close double quotes when typing an opening one
2335 Editor Display preferences
2336 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2338 This is for visual elements displayed in the editor window.
2340 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_edit_display.png
2345 Invert syntax highlighting colors
2346 Invert all colors, by default this makes white text on a black
2349 Show indendation guides
2350 Show vertical lines to help show how much leading indentation there
2354 Mark all tabs with an arrow "-->" symbol and spaces with dots to
2355 show which kinds of whitespace are used.
2358 Display a symbol everywhere that a carriage return or line feed
2361 Show only non-default line endings
2362 Shows line ending characters only when they differ from the
2363 file default line ending character.
2366 Show or hide the Line Number margin.
2369 Show or hide the small margin right of the line numbers, which is used
2372 Stop scrolling at last line
2373 When enabled Geany stops scrolling when at the last line of the document.
2374 Otherwise you can scroll one more page even if there are no real lines.
2376 Lines visible around the cursor
2377 The number of lines to maintain between the cursor and the top and bottom
2378 edges of the view. This allows some lines of context around the cursor to
2379 always be visible. If *Stop scrolling at last line* is disabled, the cursor
2380 will never reach the bottom edge when this value is greater than 0.
2386 The long line marker helps to indicate overly-long lines, or as a hint
2387 to the user for when to break the line.
2391 Show a thin vertical line in the editor window at the given column
2394 Change the background color of characters after the given column
2395 position to the color set below. (This is recommended over the
2396 *Line* setting if you use proportional fonts).
2398 Don't mark long lines at all.
2401 Set this value to a value greater than zero to specify the column
2402 where it should appear.
2404 Long line marker color
2405 Set the color of the long line marker.
2411 Virtual space is space beyond the end of each line.
2412 The cursor may be moved into virtual space but no real space will be
2413 added to the document until there is some text typed or some other
2414 text insertion command is used.
2417 Do not show virtual spaces
2419 Only for rectangular selections
2420 Only show virtual spaces beyond the end of lines when drawing a rectangular selection
2423 Always show virtual spaces beyond the end of lines
2429 The *change history* feature enables changed text in a document to be shown in the markers margin or by underlining the text.
2430 By default, the *change history* feature is disabled.
2432 Newly added, modified and removed lines or words are highlighted to easily track changes to the opened
2433 document. The changes can be shown as vertical bars in the markers margin and/or as underlines in
2437 This feature may use a moderate amount of memory, especially if there are many or big changes in the document.
2438 Also, modification information is not kept when re-opening a document - all change markers will be lost.
2441 .. image:: ./images/edit_change_history.png
2443 The image shows the default visuals:
2445 * inserted characters appear with coloured underlines
2446 * points where characters were deleted are shown with small triangles
2447 * the margin shows a block indicating the overall state of the line, prioritizing the more consequential modified states
2448 * the states are modified (orange), saved (green), saved then reverted to modified (green-yellow), and
2449 saved then reverted to original (cyan).
2451 Show in markers margin
2452 Changes are shown in the markers margin as vertical bars
2454 Show as underline indicators
2455 Changes are shown as underlines in the text directly
2461 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_files.png
2466 Open new documents from the command-line
2467 Whether to create new documents when passing filenames that don't
2468 exist from the command-line.
2470 Default encoding (new files)
2471 The type of file encoding you wish to use when creating files.
2473 Used fixed encoding when opening files
2474 Assume all files you are opening are using the type of encoding specified below.
2476 Default encoding (existing files)
2477 Opens all files with the specified encoding instead of auto-detecting it.
2478 Use this option when it's not possible for Geany to detect the exact encoding.
2480 Default end of line characters
2481 The end of line characters to which should be used for new files.
2482 On Windows systems, you generally want to use CR/LF which are the common
2483 characters to mark line breaks.
2484 On Unix-like systems, LF is default and CR is used on MAC systems.
2488 Perform formatting operations when a document is saved. These
2489 can each be undone with the Undo command.
2491 Ensure newline at file end
2492 Add a newline at the end of the document if one is missing.
2494 Ensure consistent line endings
2495 Ensures that newline characters always get converted before
2496 saving, avoiding mixed line endings in the same file.
2498 .. _Strip trailing spaces:
2500 Strip trailing spaces
2501 Remove any whitespace at the end of each document line.
2504 This does not apply to Diff documents, e.g. patch files.
2506 Replace tabs with spaces
2507 Replace all tabs in the document with the equivalent number of spaces.
2510 It is better to use spaces to indent than use this preference - see
2516 Recent files list length
2517 The number of files to remember in the recently used files list.
2520 The number of seconds to periodically check the current document's
2521 file on disk in case it has changed. Setting it to 0 will disable
2525 These checks are only performed on local files. Remote files are
2526 not checked for changes due to performance issues
2527 (remote files are files in ``~/.gvfs/``).
2533 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_tools.png
2539 The command to execute a script in a terminal. Occurrences of %c
2540 in the command are substituted with the run script name, see
2541 `Terminal emulators`_.
2544 The location of your web browser executable.
2547 The location of the grep executable.
2550 For Windows users: at the time of writing it is recommended to use
2551 the grep.exe from the UnxUtils project
2552 (https://sourceforge.net/projects/unxutils). The grep.exe from the
2553 Mingw project for instance might not work with Geany at the moment.
2559 Set this to a command to execute on the current word.
2560 You can use the "%s" wildcard to pass the current word below the cursor
2561 to the specified command.
2564 Template preferences
2565 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2568 This data is used as meta data for various template text to insert into
2569 a document, such as the file header. You only need to set fields that
2570 you want to use in your template files.
2572 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_templ.png
2576 See `Template meta data`_.
2579 The name of the developer who will be creating files.
2582 The initials of the developer.
2585 The email address of the developer.
2588 You may wish to add anti-spam markup, e.g. ``name<at>site<dot>ext``.
2591 The company the developer is working for.
2594 The initial version of files you will be creating.
2597 Specify a format for the ``{year}`` wildcard.
2600 Specify a format for the ``{date}`` wildcard.
2603 Specify a format for the ``{datetime}`` wildcard.
2605 See `Date & time wildcards`_ for more information.
2608 Keybinding preferences
2609 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2611 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_keys.png
2613 There are some commands listed in the keybinding dialog that are not, by default,
2614 bound to a key combination, and may not be available as a menu item.
2617 For more information see the section `Keybindings`_.
2620 Printing preferences
2621 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2623 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_printing.png
2625 Use external command for printing
2626 Use a system command to print your file out.
2628 Use native GTK printing
2629 Let the GTK GUI toolkit handle your print request.
2632 Print the line numbers on the left of your paper.
2635 Print the page number on the bottom right of your paper.
2638 Print a header on every page that is sent to the printer.
2640 Use base name of the printed file
2641 Don't use the entire path for the header, only the filename.
2644 How the date should be printed. For a list of available conversion
2645 specifiers see https://docs.gtk.org/glib/method.DateTime.format.html.
2651 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_various.png
2653 Rarely used preferences, explained in the table below. A few of them require
2654 restart to take effect, and a few other will only affect newly opened or created
2655 documents before restart.
2657 ================================ =========================================== ========== ===========
2658 Key Description Default Applies
2659 ================================ =========================================== ========== ===========
2660 **``editor`` group**
2661 use_gtk_word_boundaries Whether to look for the end of a word true to new
2662 when using word-boundary related documents
2663 Scintilla commands (see `Scintilla
2664 keyboard commands`_).
2665 brace_match_ltgt Whether to highlight <, > angle brackets. false immediately
2666 complete_snippets_whilst_editing Whether to allow completion of snippets false immediately
2667 when editing an existing line (i.e. there
2668 is some text after the current cursor
2669 position on the line). Only used when the
2670 keybinding `Complete snippet` is set to
2672 show_editor_scrollbars Whether to display scrollbars. If set to true immediately
2673 false, the horizontal and vertical
2674 scrollbars are hidden completely.
2675 indent_hard_tab_width The size of a tab character. Don't change 8 immediately
2676 it unless you really need to; use the
2677 indentation settings instead.
2678 editor_ime_interaction Input method editor (IME)'s candidate 0 to new
2679 window behaviour. May be 0 (windowed) or documents
2681 **``interface`` group**
2682 show_symbol_list_expanders Whether to show or hide the small true to new
2683 expander icons on the symbol list documents
2685 compiler_tab_autoscroll Whether to automatically scroll to the true immediately
2686 last line of the output in the Compiler
2688 statusbar_template The status bar statistics line format. See below. immediately
2689 (See `Statusbar Templates`_ for details).
2690 new_document_after_close Whether to open a new document after all false immediately
2691 documents have been closed.
2692 msgwin_status_visible Whether to show the Status tab in the true immediately
2694 msgwin_compiler_visible Whether to show the Compiler tab in the true immediately
2696 msgwin_messages_visible Whether to show the Messages tab in the true immediately
2698 msgwin_scribble_visible Whether to show the Scribble tab in the true immediately
2700 warn_on_project_close Whether to show a warning when opening true immediately
2701 a project while one is already open.
2702 **``terminal`` group**
2703 send_selection_unsafe By default, Geany strips any trailing false immediately
2704 newline characters from the current
2705 selection before sending it to the terminal
2706 to not execute arbitrary code. This is
2707 mainly a security feature.
2708 If, for whatever reasons, you really want
2709 it to be executed directly, set this option
2711 send_cmd_prefix String with which prefix the commands sent Empty immediately
2712 to the shell. This may be used to tell
2713 some shells (BASH with ``HISTCONTROL`` set
2714 to ``ignorespace``, ZSH with
2715 ``HIST_IGNORE_SPACE`` enabled, etc.) from
2716 putting these commands in their history by
2717 setting this to a space. Note that leading
2718 spaces must be escaped using `\s` in the
2721 allow_always_save Whether files can be saved always, even false immediately
2722 if they don't have any changes.
2723 By default, the Save button and menu
2724 item are disabled when a file is
2725 unchanged. When setting this option to
2726 true, the Save button and menu item are
2727 always active and files can be saved.
2728 use_atomic_file_saving Defines the mode how Geany saves files to false immediately
2729 disk. If disabled, Geany directly writes
2730 the content of the document to disk. This
2731 might cause loss of data when there is
2732 no more free space on disk to save the
2733 file. When set to true, Geany first saves
2734 the contents into a temporary file and if
2735 this succeeded, the temporary file is
2736 moved to the real file to save.
2737 This gives better error checking in case of
2738 no more free disk space. But it also
2739 destroys hard links of the original file
2740 and its permissions (e.g. executable flags
2741 are reset). Use this with care as it can
2742 break things seriously.
2743 The better approach would be to ensure your
2744 disk won't run out of free space.
2745 use_gio_unsafe_file_saving Whether to use GIO as the unsafe file true immediately
2746 saving backend. It is better on most
2747 situations but is known not to work
2748 correctly on some complex setups.
2749 gio_unsafe_save_backup Make a backup when using GIO unsafe file false immediately
2750 saving. Backup is named `filename~`.
2751 keep_edit_history_on_reload Whether to maintain the edit history when true immediately
2752 reloading a file, and allow the operation
2754 reload_clean_doc_on_file_change Whether to automatically reload documents false immediately
2755 that have no changes but which have changed
2757 If unsaved changes exist then the user is
2758 prompted to reload manually.
2759 save_config_on_file_change Automatically save Geany's configuration true immediately
2760 to disk once the document list changes
2761 (i.e. new documents are opened, saved or
2762 closed). This helps to prevent accidentally
2763 losing the session file list or other
2764 changed settings when Geany is not shut
2765 down cleanly. Disable this option if your
2766 configuration directory is on a slow drive,
2767 network share or similar and you experience
2769 extract_filetype_regex Regex to extract filetype name from file See link immediately
2770 via capture group one.
2771 See `ft_regex`_ for default.
2772 **``search`` group**
2773 find_selection_type See `Find selection`_. 0 immediately
2774 replace_and_find_by_default Set ``Replace & Find`` button as default so true immediately
2775 it will be activated when the Enter key is
2776 pressed while one of the text fields has
2779 number_ft_menu_items The maximum number of menu items in the 2 on restart
2780 filetype build section of the Build menu.
2781 number_non_ft_menu_items The maximum number of menu items in the 3 on restart
2782 independent build section.
2783 number_exec_menu_items The maximum number of menu items in the 2 on restart
2784 execute section of the Build menu.
2785 **``socket`` group**
2786 socket_remote_cmd_port TCP port number to be used for inter 2 on restart
2787 process communication (i.e. with other
2788 Geany instances, e.g. "Open with Geany").
2789 Only available on Windows, valid port
2790 range: 1024 to 65535.
2791 ================================ =========================================== ========== ===========
2796 The default statusbar template is (note ``\t`` = tab):
2798 ``line: %l / %L\t col: %c\t sel: %s\t %w %t %mEOL: %M encoding: %e filetype: %f scope: %S``
2800 Settings the preference to an empty string will also cause Geany to use this
2803 The following format characters are available for the statusbar template:
2805 ============ ===========================================================
2806 Placeholder Description
2807 ============ ===========================================================
2808 ``%l`` The current line number starting at 1
2809 ``%L`` The total number of lines
2810 ``%c`` The current column number starting at 0, including virtual
2812 ``%C`` The current column number starting at 1, including virtual
2814 ``%s`` The number of selected characters or if only whole lines
2815 selected, the number of selected lines.
2816 ``%n`` The number of selected characters, even if only whole lines
2818 ``%w`` Shows ``RO`` when the document is in read-only mode,
2819 otherwise shows whether the editor is in overtype (OVR)
2820 or insert (INS) mode.
2821 ``%t`` Shows the indentation mode, either tabs (TAB),
2822 spaces (SP) or both (T/S).
2823 ``%m`` Shows whether the document is modified (MOD) or nothing.
2824 ``%M`` The name of the document's line-endings (ex. ``Unix (LF)``)
2825 ``%e`` The name of the document's encoding (ex. UTF-8).
2826 ``%f`` The filetype of the document (ex. None, Python, C, etc).
2827 ``%S`` The name of the scope where the caret is located.
2828 ``%p`` The caret position in the entire document starting at 0.
2829 ``%r`` Shows whether the document is read-only (RO) or nothing.
2830 ``%Y`` The Scintilla style number at the caret position. This is
2831 useful if you're debugging color schemes or related code.
2832 ============ ===========================================================
2834 Terminal (VTE) preferences
2835 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2837 See also: `Virtual terminal emulator widget (VTE)`_.
2839 .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_vte.png
2845 Select the font that will be used in the terminal emulation control.
2848 Select the font color.
2851 Select the background color of the terminal.
2854 Select the background image to show behind the terminal's text.
2857 The number of lines buffered so that you can scroll though the history.
2860 The location of the shell on your system.
2863 Scroll the terminal to the prompt line when pressing a key.
2866 Scroll the output down.
2869 Let the terminal cursor blink.
2871 Override Geany keybindings
2872 Allow the VTE to receive keyboard shortcuts (apart from focus commands).
2874 Disable menu shortcut key (F10 by default)
2875 Disable the menu shortcut when you are in the virtual terminal.
2877 Follow path of the current file
2878 Make the path of the terminal change according to the path of the
2881 Execute programs in VTE
2882 Execute programs in the virtual terminal instead of using the external
2883 terminal tool. Note that if you run multiple execute commands at once
2884 the output may become mixed together in the VTE.
2886 Don't use run script
2887 Don't use the simple run script which is usually used to display
2888 the exit status of the executed program.
2889 This can be useful if you already have a program running in the VTE
2890 like a Python console (e.g. ipython). Use this with care.
2896 Project management is optional in Geany. Currently it can be used for:
2898 * Storing and opening session files on a project basis.
2899 * Overriding default settings with project equivalents.
2900 * Configuring the Build menu on a project basis.
2902 A list of session files can be stored and opened with the project
2903 when the *Use project-based session files* preference is enabled,
2904 in the `Projects`_ group of the `General Miscellaneous preferences`_ tab
2905 of the `Preferences`_ dialog.
2907 As long as a project is open, the Build menu will use
2908 the items defined in project's settings, instead of the defaults.
2909 See `Build Menu Configuration`_ for information on configuring the menu.
2911 The current project's settings are saved when it is closed, or when
2912 Geany is shutdown. When restarting Geany, the previously opened project
2913 file that was in use at the end of the last session will be reopened.
2915 The project menu items are detailed below.
2921 There are two ways of creating new projects, either by using
2922 *Project->New* menu item or by using *Project->New from Folder* menu
2926 This method is more suitable for creating new, empty projects from
2927 scratch at the default location without having any existing sources.
2929 To create a new project, fill in the *Name* field. By default this
2930 will setup a new project file ``~/projects/name/name.geany``.
2932 The *Base path* text field is setup to use ``~/projects/name``. This
2933 can safely be set to any existing path -- it will not touch the file
2934 structure contained in it.
2937 This method is more suitable when there is already some folder
2938 containing source files for which you want to create a new project.
2940 When using this method, Geany first opens a directory selection
2941 dialog to select the folder containing the sources, and the
2942 *Base path* field is set to that value.
2944 Afterwards, Geany shows the same dialog as the *Project->New*
2945 method but already pre-filled with the values based on the
2946 *Base path* selection. The *Name* field is filled with the folder
2947 name, the *Filename* field is filled with
2948 ``base_path/name.geany`` and the *Base path* field is filled with
2949 the path specified in the previous dialog.
2955 You can set an optional description for the project. Currently it's
2956 only used for the ``{description}}`` template wildcard - see `Dynamic wildcards`_.
2958 The *Base path* field is used as the directory to run the Build menu commands.
2959 The specified path can be an absolute path or it is considered to be
2960 relative to the project's file name.
2962 The *File patterns* field allows to specify a list of file patterns for the
2963 project, which can be used in the `Find in files`_ dialog.
2965 The *Indentation* tab allows you to override the default
2966 `Indentation`_ settings.
2972 The Open command displays a standard file chooser, starting in
2973 ``~/projects``. Choose a project file named with the ``.geany``
2976 When project session support is enabled, Geany will close the currently
2977 open files and open the session files associated with the project.
2983 Project file settings are saved when the project is closed.
2985 When project session support is enabled, Geany will close the project
2986 session files and open any previously closed default session files.
2991 After editing code with Geany, the next step is to compile, link, build,
2992 interpret, run etc. As Geany supports many languages each with a different
2993 approach to such operations, and as there are also many language independent
2994 software building systems, Geany does not have a built-in build system, nor
2995 does it limit which system you can use. Instead the build menu provides
2996 a configurable and flexible means of running any external commands to
2997 execute your preferred build system.
2999 This section provides a description of the default configuration of the
3000 build menu and then covers how to configure it, and where the defaults fit in.
3002 Running the commands from within Geany has two benefits:
3004 * The current file is automatically saved before the command is run.
3005 * The output is captured in the Compiler notebook tab and parsed for
3008 Warnings and errors that can be parsed for line numbers will be shown in
3009 red in the Compiler tab and you can click on them to switch to the relevant
3010 source file (or open it) and mark the line number. Also lines with
3011 warnings or errors are marked in the source, see `Indicators`_ below.
3014 If Geany's default error message parsing does not parse errors for
3015 the tool you're using, you can set a custom regex in the
3016 `Set Build Commands dialog`_, see `Build Menu Configuration`_.
3021 Indicators are red squiggly underlines which are used to highlight
3022 errors which occurred while compiling the current file. So you can
3023 easily see where your code failed to compile. You can remove them by
3024 selecting *Remove Error Indicators* in the Document menu.
3026 If you do not like this feature, you can disable it - see `Editor Features
3030 Default build menu items
3031 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3032 Depending on the current file's filetype, the default Build menu will contain
3033 the following items:
3039 * Make Custom Target
3044 * Set Build Menu Commands
3050 The Compile command has different uses for different kinds of files.
3052 For compilable languages such as C and C++, the Compile command is
3053 set up to compile the current source file into a binary object file.
3055 Java source files will be compiled to class file bytecode.
3057 Interpreted languages such as Perl, Python, Ruby will compile to
3058 bytecode if the language supports it, or will run a syntax check,
3059 or if that is not available will run the file in its language interpreter.
3064 For compilable languages such as C and C++, the Build command will link
3065 the current source file's equivalent object file into an executable. If
3066 the object file does not exist, the source will be compiled and linked
3067 in one step, producing just the executable binary.
3069 Interpreted languages do not use the Build command.
3072 If you need complex settings for your build system, or several
3073 different settings, then writing a Makefile and using the Make
3074 commands is recommended; this will also make it easier for users to
3075 build your software.
3080 Source code linters are often used to find code that doesn't correspond to
3081 certain style guidelines: non-portable code, common or hard to find
3082 errors, code "smells", variables used before being set, unused functions,
3083 division by zero, constant conditions, etc. Linters inspect the code and
3084 issue warnings much like the compilers do. This is formally referred to as
3085 static code analysis.
3087 Some common linters are pre-configured for you in the Build menu (``pycodestyle``
3088 for Python, ``cppcheck`` for C/C++, JSHint for JavaScript, ``xmllint`` for
3089 XML, ``hlint`` for Haskell, ``shellcheck`` for shell code, ...), but all
3090 these are standalone tools you need to obtain before using.
3095 This runs "make" in the same directory as the
3101 This is similar to running 'Make' but you will be prompted for
3102 the make target name to be passed to the Make tool. For example,
3103 typing 'clean' in the dialog prompt will run "make clean".
3109 Make object will run "make current_file.o" in the same directory as
3110 the current file, using the filename for 'current_file'. It is useful
3111 for building just the current file without building the whole project.
3116 The next error item will move to the next detected error in the file.
3120 The previous error item will move to the previous detected error in the file.
3125 Execute will run the corresponding executable file, shell script or
3126 interpreted script in a terminal window. The command set in the
3127 `Set Build Commands dialog`_ is run in a script to ensure the terminal
3128 stays open after execution completes. Note: see `Terminal emulators`_
3129 below for the command format. Alternatively the built-in VTE can be used
3130 if it is available - see `Virtual terminal emulator widget (VTE)`_.
3132 After your program or script has finished executing, the run script will
3133 prompt you to press the return key. This allows you to review any text
3134 output from the program before the terminal window is closed.
3137 The execute command output is not parsed for errors.
3140 Stopping running processes
3141 ``````````````````````````
3143 When there is a running program, the Execute menu item in the menu and
3144 the Run button in the toolbar
3145 each become a stop button so you can stop the current running program (and
3146 any child processes). This works by sending the SIGQUIT signal to the process.
3148 Depending on the process you started it is possible that the process
3149 cannot be stopped. For example this can happen when the process creates
3150 more than one child process.
3156 The Terminal field of the tools preferences tab requires a command to
3157 execute the terminal program and to pass it the name of the Geany run
3158 script that it should execute in a Bourne compatible shell (eg /bin/sh).
3159 The marker "%c" is substituted with the name of the Geany run script,
3160 which is created in the temporary directory and which changes the working
3161 directory to the directory set in the `Set Build Commands dialog`_.
3163 As an example the default (Linux) command is::
3165 xterm -e "/bin/sh %c"
3171 By default Compile, Build and Execute are fairly basic commands. You
3172 may wish to customise them using *Set Build Commands*.
3174 E.g. for C you can add any include paths and compile flags for the
3175 compiler, any library names and paths for the linker, and any
3176 arguments you want to use when running Execute.
3178 Build menu configuration
3179 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3181 The build menu has considerable flexibility and configurability, allowing
3182 menu labels, the commands they execute and the directory they execute
3183 in to be configured. For example, if you change one of the default make
3184 commands to run say 'waf' you can also change the label to match.
3185 These settings are saved automatically when Geany is shut down.
3187 The build menu is divided into four groups of items each with different
3190 * Filetype build commands - are configurable and depend on the filetype of the
3191 current document; they capture output in the compiler tab and parse it for
3193 * Independent build commands - are configurable and mostly don't depend on the
3194 filetype of the current document; they also capture output in the
3195 compiler tab and parse it for errors.
3196 * Execute commands - are configurable and intended for executing your
3197 program or other long running programs. The output is not parsed for
3198 errors and is directed to the terminal command selected in `Tools
3200 * Fixed commands - these perform built-in actions:
3202 * Go to the next error.
3203 * Go to the previous error.
3204 * Show the build menu commands dialog.
3206 The maximum numbers of items in each of the configurable groups can be
3207 configured in `Various preferences`_. Even though the maximum number of
3208 items may have been increased, only those menu items that have commands
3209 configured are shown in the menu.
3211 The groups of menu items obtain their configuration from four potential
3212 sources. The highest priority source that has the menu item defined will
3213 be used. The sources in decreasing priority are:
3215 * A project file if open
3216 * The user preferences
3217 * The system filetype definitions
3220 The detailed relationships between sources and the configurable menu item groups
3221 is shown in the following table:
3223 +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+-------------------+-------------------------------+
3224 | Group | Project File | Preferences | System Filetype | Defaults |
3225 +==============+=====================+==========================+===================+===============================+
3226 | Filetype | Loads From: project | Loads From: | Loads From: | None |
3227 | Build | file | filetypes.xxx file in | filetypes.xxx in | |
3228 | | | ~/.config/geany/filedefs | Geany install | |
3229 | | Saves To: project | | | |
3230 | | file | Saves to: as above, | Saves to: as user | |
3231 | | | creating if needed. | preferences left. | |
3232 +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+-------------------+-------------------------------+
3233 | Independent | Loads From: project | Loads From: | Loads From: | 1: |
3234 | Build | file | geany.conf file in | filetypes.xxx in | Label: _Make |
3235 | | | ~/.config/geany | Geany install | Command: make |
3236 | | Saves To: project | | | |
3237 | | file | Saves to: as above, | Saves to: as user | 2: |
3238 | | | creating if needed. | preferences left. | Label: Make Custom _Target |
3239 | | | | | Command: make |
3242 | | | | | Label: Make _Object |
3243 | | | | | Command: make %e.o |
3244 +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+-------------------+-------------------------------+
3245 | Execute | Loads From: project | Loads From: | Loads From: | Label: _Execute |
3246 | | file or else | geany.conf file in | filetypes.xxx in | Command: ./%e |
3247 | | filetype defined in | ~/.config/geany or else | Geany install | |
3248 | | project file | filetypes.xxx file in | | |
3249 | | | ~/.config/geany/filedefs | Saves To: as user | |
3250 | | Saves To: | | preferences left. | |
3251 | | project file | Saves To: | | |
3252 | | | filetypes.xxx file in | | |
3253 | | | ~/.config/geany/filedefs | | |
3254 +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+-------------------+-------------------------------+
3256 The following notes on the table may reference cells by coordinate as *(group, source)*:
3258 * Filetype filenames - for filetypes.xxx substitute the appropriate extension for
3259 the filetype of the current document for xxx - see `filenames`_.
3261 * System Filetypes - Labels loaded from these sources are locale sensitive
3262 and can contain translations.
3264 * *(Filetype build, Project and Preferences)* - preferences use a full
3265 filetype file so that users can configure all other filetype preferences
3266 as well. Projects can only configure menu items per filetype. Saving
3267 in the project file means that there is only one file per project not
3270 * *(Filetype-Independent build, System Filetype)* - although conceptually strange, defining
3271 filetype-independent commands in a filetype file, this provides the ability to
3272 define filetype dependent default menu items.
3274 * *(Execute, Project and Preferences)* - the project independent
3275 execute and preferences independent execute commands can only be set by hand
3276 editing the appropriate file, see `Preferences file format`_ and `Project file
3279 Set Build Commands dialog
3280 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3282 Most of the configuration of the build menu is done through the `Set
3283 Build Commands dialog`_. When no project is open, you can edit the
3284 configuration sourced from user preferences using the *Build->Set Build
3285 Commands* menu item. You can edit the configuration sourced from a
3286 project in the *Build* tab of the `Project Properties`_ dialog. The
3287 former menu item also shows the project dialog when a project is open.
3288 Both use the same form shown below.
3290 .. image:: ./images/build_menu_commands_dialog.png
3292 The dialog is divided into three sections:
3294 * Filetype build commands (selected based on the current document's filetype).
3295 * Independent build commands (available regardless of filetype).
3296 * Filetype execute commands.
3298 The filetype and independent build sections also each contain a field for the regular
3299 expression used for parsing command output for error and warning messages.
3301 The columns in the first three sections allow setting of the label, command,
3302 and working directory to run the command in. An item with an empty
3303 label will not be shown in the menu. An empty working directory will
3304 default to the directory of the current document.
3306 If there is no current document then the command will not run.
3308 The dialog will always show the command selected by priority, not just the
3309 commands configured in this configuration source. This ensures that you always
3310 see what the menu item is going to do if activated.
3312 If the current source of the menu item is higher priority than the
3313 configuration source you are editing then the command will be shown
3314 in the dialog but will be insensitive (greyed out). This can't happen
3315 with the project source but can with the preferences source dialog.
3317 The clear buttons remove the definition from the configuration source you are editing.
3318 When you do this the command from the next lower priority source will be shown.
3319 To hide lower priority menu items without having anything show in the menu,
3320 configure with nothing in the label but at least one character in the command.
3322 Substitutions in commands and working directories
3323 `````````````````````````````````````````````````
3325 Before the command is run, the first occurrence of each of the following
3326 two character sequences in each of the command and working directory
3327 fields is substituted by the items specified below:
3329 * %d - the absolute path to the directory of the current file.
3330 * %e - the name of the current file without the extension or path.
3331 * %f - the name of the current file without the path.
3332 * %p - if a project is open, the base path from the project.
3333 * %l - the line number at the current cursor position.
3336 If the base path set in `Project Properties`_ is not an absolute path, then it is
3337 taken as relative to the directory of the project file. This allows a project file
3338 stored in the source tree to specify all commands and working directories relative
3339 to the tree itself, so that the whole tree including the project file, can be moved
3340 and even checked into and out of version control without having to re-configure the
3343 Build menu keyboard shortcuts
3344 `````````````````````````````
3346 Keyboard shortcuts can be defined for:
3348 * the first two filetype build menu items
3349 * the first three independent build menu items
3350 * the first execute menu item
3351 * the fixed menu items (Next/Previous Error, Set Commands)
3353 In the keybindings configuration dialog (see `Keybinding preferences`_)
3354 these items are identified by the default labels shown in the `Build Menu`_ section above.
3356 It is currently not possible to bind keyboard shortcuts to more than these menu items.
3357 You can also use underlines in the labels to set mnemonic characters.
3361 The configurable Build Menu capability was introduced in Geany 0.19 and
3362 required a new section to be added to the configuration files (See
3363 `Preferences file format`_). Geany will still load older format project,
3364 preferences and filetype file settings and will attempt to map them into the new
3365 configuration format. There is not a simple clean mapping between the formats.
3366 The mapping used produces the most sensible results for the majority of cases.
3367 However, if they do not map the way you want, you may have to manually
3368 configure some settings using the `Set Build Commands dialog`_.
3370 Any setting configured in either of these dialogs will override settings mapped from
3371 older format configuration files.
3376 Since Geany 0.13 there has been printing support using GTK's printing API.
3377 The printed page(s) will look nearly the same as on your screen in Geany.
3378 Additionally, there are some options to modify the printed page(s).
3381 The background text color is set to white, except for text with
3382 a white foreground. This allows dark color schemes to save ink
3385 You can define whether to print line numbers, page numbers at the bottom of
3386 each page and whether to print a page header on each page. This header
3387 contains the filename of the printed document, the current page number and
3388 the date and time of printing. By default, the file name of the document
3389 with full path information is added to the header. If you prefer to add
3390 only the basename of the file(without any path information) you can set it
3391 in the preferences dialog. You can also adjust the format of the date and
3392 time added to the page header. For a list of available conversion
3393 specifiers see https://docs.gtk.org/glib/method.DateTime.format.html.
3395 All of these settings can also be changed in the print dialog just before
3396 actual printing is done.
3397 On Unix-like systems the provided print dialog offers a print preview. The
3398 preview file is opened with a PDF viewer and by default GTK uses ``evince``
3399 for print preview. If you have not installed evince or just want to use
3400 another PDF viewer, you can change the program to use in the file
3401 ``settings.ini`` (usually found in ``~/.config/gtk-3.0``, see the
3402 `GTK documentation`_). For example, use::
3405 gtk-print-preview-command = epdfview %f
3407 Of course, you can also use xpdf, kpdf or whatever as the print preview
3408 command. That command should ideally delete the temporary file referenced by
3409 ``%f``. See the `GTK documentation for the setting`_ for more details.
3411 .. _GTK documentation: https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/stable/GtkSettings.html#GtkSettings.description
3412 .. _GTK documentation for the setting: https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/stable/GtkSettings.html#GtkSettings--gtk-print-preview-command
3415 Geany also provides an alternative basic printing support using a custom
3416 print command. However, the printed document contains no syntax highlighting.
3417 You can adjust the command to which the filename is passed in the preferences
3418 dialog. The default command is::
3422 ``%f`` will be substituted by the filename of the current file. Geany
3423 will not show errors from the command itself, so you should make
3424 sure that it works before(e.g. by trying to execute it from the
3427 A nicer example, which many prefer is::
3429 % a2ps -1 --medium=A4 -o - %f | xfprint4
3431 But this depends on a2ps and xfprint4. As a replacement for xfprint4,
3432 gtklp or similar programs can be used.
3439 Plugins are loaded at startup, if the *Enable plugin support*
3440 general preference is set. There is also a command-line option,
3441 ``-p``, which prevents plugins being loaded. Plugins are scanned in
3442 the following directories:
3444 * ``$prefix/lib/geany`` on Unix-like systems (see `Installation prefix`_)
3445 * The ``lib`` subfolder of the installation path on Windows.
3446 * The ``plugins`` subfolder of the user configuration directory - see
3447 `Configuration file paths`_.
3448 * The `Extra plugin path` preference (usually blank) - see `Paths`_.
3450 Most plugins add menu items to the *Tools* menu when they are loaded.
3452 See also `Plugin documentation`_ for information about single plugins
3453 which are included in Geany.
3457 The Plugin Manager dialog lets you choose which plugins
3458 should be loaded at startup. You can also load and unload plugins on the
3459 fly using this dialog. Once you click the checkbox for a specific plugin
3460 in the dialog, it is loaded or unloaded according to its previous state.
3461 By default, no plugins are loaded at startup until you select some.
3462 You can also configure some plugin specific options if the plugin
3469 Geany supports the default keyboard shortcuts for the Scintilla
3470 editing widget. For a list of these commands, see `Scintilla
3471 keyboard commands`_. The Scintilla keyboard shortcuts will be overridden
3472 by any custom keybindings with the same keyboard shortcut.
3478 There are some non-configurable bindings to switch between documents,
3479 listed below. These can also be overridden by custom keybindings.
3481 =============== ==================================
3483 =============== ==================================
3484 Alt-[1-9] Select left-most tab, from 1 to 9.
3485 Alt-0 Select right-most tab.
3486 =============== ==================================
3488 See also `Notebook tab keybindings`_.
3491 Configurable keybindings
3492 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3494 For all actions listed below you can define your own keybindings. Open
3495 the Preferences dialog, select the desired action and click on
3496 change. In the resulting dialog you can press the key combination you
3497 want to assign to the action and it will be saved when you press OK.
3498 You can define only one key combination for each action and each key
3499 combination can only be defined for one action.
3501 The following tables list all customizable keyboard shortcuts, those
3502 which are common to many applications are marked with (C) after the
3507 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3508 Action Default shortcut Description
3509 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3510 New Ctrl-N (C) Creates a new file.
3512 Open Ctrl-O (C) Opens a file.
3514 Open selected file Ctrl-Shift-O Opens the selected filename.
3516 Re-open last closed tab Re-opens the last closed document tab.
3518 Save Ctrl-S (C) Saves the current file.
3520 Save As Saves the current file under a new name.
3522 Save all Ctrl-Shift-S Saves all open files.
3524 Close all Ctrl-Shift-W Closes all open files.
3526 Close Ctrl-W (C) Closes the current file.
3528 Reload file Ctrl-R (C) Reloads the current file.
3530 Reload all Reloads all open files. If the reload will not be 'undo'-able and changes that will be lost are detected (unsaved or saved) the reload will be confirmed, otherwise the reload will proceed without confirmation.
3532 Print Ctrl-P (C) Prints the current file.
3534 Quit Ctrl-Q (C) Quits Geany.
3535 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3540 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3541 Action Default shortcut Description
3542 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3543 Undo Ctrl-Z (C) Un-does the last action.
3545 Redo Ctrl-Y Re-does the last action.
3547 Delete current line(s) Ctrl-K Deletes the current line (and any lines with a
3550 Delete to line end Ctrl-Shift-Delete Deletes from the current caret position to the
3551 end of the current line.
3553 Delete to line start Ctrl-Shift-BackSpace Deletes from the beginning of the line to the
3554 current caret position.
3556 Duplicate line or selection Ctrl-D Duplicates the current line or selection.
3558 Transpose current line Transposes the current line with the previous one.
3560 Scroll to current line Ctrl-Shift-L Scrolls the current line into the centre of the
3561 view. The cursor position and or an existing
3562 selection will not be changed.
3564 Scroll up by one line Alt-Up Scrolls the view.
3566 Scroll down by one line Alt-Down Scrolls the view.
3568 Complete word Ctrl-Space Shows the autocompletion list. If already showing
3569 symbol completion, it shows document word completion
3570 instead, even if it is not enabled for automatic
3571 completion. Likewise if no symbol suggestions are
3572 available, it shows document word completion.
3574 Show calltip Ctrl-Shift-Space Shows a calltip for the current function or
3577 Complete snippet Tab If you type a keyword like ``if`` or ``for`` and press
3578 this key, it will be completed with a matching
3579 template - see `User-definable snippets`_.
3581 Suppress snippet completion If you type a construct like ``if`` or ``for`` and press
3582 this key, it will not be completed, and a space or
3583 tab will be inserted, depending on what the
3584 construct completion keybinding is set to. For
3585 example, if you have set the construct completion
3586 keybinding to a space, then setting this to
3587 Shift+space will prevent construct completion and
3590 Context Action Executes a command and passes the current word
3591 (near the cursor position) or selection as an
3592 argument. See the section called `Context
3595 Move cursor in snippet Jumps to the next defined cursor positions in a
3596 completed snippets if multiple cursor positions
3599 Word part completion Tab When the autocompletion list is visible, complete
3600 the currently selected item up to the next word
3603 Move line(s) up Alt-PageUp Move the current line or selected lines up by
3606 Move line(s) down Alt-PageDown Move the current line or selected lines down by
3608 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3611 Clipboard keybindings
3612 `````````````````````
3613 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3614 Action Default shortcut Description
3615 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3616 Cut Ctrl-X (C) Cut the current selection to the clipboard.
3618 Copy Ctrl-C (C) Copy the current selection to the clipboard.
3620 Paste Ctrl-V (C) Paste the clipboard text into the current document.
3622 Cut current line(s) Ctrl-Shift-X Cuts the current line (and any lines with a
3623 selection) to the clipboard.
3625 Copy current line(s) Ctrl-Shift-C Copies the current line (and any lines with a
3626 selection) to the clipboard.
3627 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3632 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3633 Action Default shortcut Description
3634 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3635 Select all Ctrl-A (C) Makes a selection of all text in the current
3638 Select current word Alt-Shift-W Selects the current word under the cursor.
3640 Select current paragraph Alt-Shift-P Selects the current paragraph under the cursor
3641 which is defined by two empty lines around it.
3643 Select current line(s) Alt-Shift-L Selects the current line under the cursor (and any
3644 partially selected lines).
3646 Select to previous word part (Extend) selection to previous word part boundary.
3648 Select to next word part (Extend) selection to next word part boundary.
3649 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3654 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3655 Action Default shortcut Description
3656 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3657 Insert date Shift-Alt-D Inserts a customisable date.
3659 Insert alternative whitespace Inserts a tab character when spaces should
3660 be used for indentation and inserts space
3661 characters of the amount of a tab width when
3662 tabs should be used for indentation.
3664 Insert New Line Before Current Inserts a new line with indentation.
3666 Insert New Line After Current Inserts a new line with indentation.
3667 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3672 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3673 Action Default shortcut Description
3674 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3675 Toggle case of selection Ctrl-Alt-U Changes the case of the selection. A lowercase
3676 selection will be changed into uppercase and vice
3677 versa. If the selection contains lower- and
3678 uppercase characters, all will be converted to
3681 Comment line Comments current line or selection.
3683 Uncomment line Uncomments current line or selection.
3685 Toggle line commentation Ctrl-E Comments a line if it is not commented or removes
3686 a comment if the line is commented.
3688 Increase indent Ctrl-I Indents the current line or selection by one tab
3689 or with spaces in the amount of the tab width
3692 Decrease indent Ctrl-U Removes one tab or the amount of spaces of
3693 the tab width setting from the indentation of the
3694 current line or selection.
3696 Increase indent by one space Indents the current line or selection by one
3699 Decrease indent by one space Deindents the current line or selection by one
3702 Smart line indent Indents the current line or all selected lines
3703 with the same indentation as the previous line.
3705 Send to Custom Command 1 (2,3) Ctrl-1 (2,3) Passes the current selection to a configured
3706 external command (available for the first
3707 9 configured commands, see
3708 `Sending text through custom commands`_ for
3711 Send Selection to Terminal Sends the current selection or the current
3712 line (if there is no selection) to the
3713 embedded Terminal (VTE).
3715 Reflow lines/block Reformat selected lines or current
3716 (indented) text block,
3717 breaking lines at the long line marker or the
3718 line breaking column if line breaking is
3719 enabled for the current document.
3721 Join Lines Replace line endings and following indentation
3722 with a single space throughout the selection
3723 or current (indented) text block.
3724 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3727 Settings keybindings
3728 ````````````````````
3729 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3730 Action Default shortcut Description
3731 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3732 Preferences Ctrl-Alt-P Opens preferences dialog.
3734 Plugin Preferences Opens plugin preferences dialog.
3735 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3740 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3741 Action Default shortcut Description
3742 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3743 Find Ctrl-F (C) Opens the Find dialog.
3745 Find Next Ctrl-G Finds next result.
3747 Find Previous Ctrl-Shift-G Finds previous result.
3749 Find Next Selection Finds next occurrence of selected text.
3751 Find Previous Selection Finds previous occurrence of selected text.
3753 Replace Ctrl-H (C) Opens the Replace dialog.
3755 Find in files Ctrl-Shift-F Opens the Find in files dialog.
3757 Next message Jumps to the line with the next message in
3758 the Messages window.
3760 Previous message Jumps to the line with the previous message
3761 in the Messages window.
3763 Find Usage Ctrl-Shift-E Finds all occurrences of the current word
3764 or selection (see note below) in all open
3765 documents and displays them in the messages
3768 Find Document Usage Ctrl-Shift-D Finds all occurrences of the current word
3769 or selection (see note below) in the current
3770 document and displays them in the messages
3773 Mark All Ctrl-Shift-M Highlight all matches of the current
3774 word/selection (see note below) in the current
3775 document with a colored box. If there's nothing
3776 to find, or the cursor is next to an existing
3777 match, the highlighted matches will be cleared.
3778 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3781 The keybindings marked "see note below" work like this: if no text is
3782 selected, the word under cursor is used, and *it has to match fully*
3783 (like when `Match only a whole word` is enabled in the Search dialog).
3784 However if some text is selected, then it is matched regardless of
3790 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3791 Action Default shortcut Description
3792 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3793 Navigate forward a location Alt-Right (C) Switches to the next location in the navigation
3794 history. See the section called `Code Navigation
3797 Navigate back a location Alt-Left (C) Switches to the previous location in the
3798 navigation history. See the section called
3799 `Code navigation history`_.
3801 Go to line Ctrl-L Focuses the Go to Line entry (if visible) or
3802 shows the Go to line dialog.
3804 Go to matching brace Ctrl-B If the cursor is ahead or behind a brace, then it
3805 is moved to the brace which belongs to the current
3806 one. If this keyboard shortcut is pressed again,
3807 the cursor is moved back to the first brace.
3809 Toggle marker Ctrl-M Set a marker on the current line, or clear the
3810 marker if there already is one.
3812 Go to next marker Ctrl-. Go to the next marker in the current document.
3814 Go to previous marker Ctrl-, Go to the previous marker in the current document.
3816 Go to symbol definition Ctrl-T Jump to the definition of the current word or
3817 selection. See `Go to symbol definition`_.
3819 Go to symbol declaration Ctrl-Shift-T Jump to the declaration of the current word or
3820 selection. See `Go to symbol declaration`_.
3822 Go to Start of Line Home Move the caret to the start of the line.
3823 Behaves differently if smart_home_key_ is set.
3825 Go to End of Line End Move the caret to the end of the line.
3827 Go to Start of Display Line Alt-Home Move the caret to the start of the display line.
3828 This is useful when you use line wrapping and
3829 want to jump to the start of the wrapped, virtual
3830 line, not the real start of the whole line.
3831 If the line is not wrapped, it behaves like
3832 `Go to Start of Line`.
3834 Go to End of Display Line Alt-End Move the caret to the end of the display line.
3835 If the line is not wrapped, it behaves like
3836 `Go to End of Line`.
3838 Go to Previous Word Part Ctrl-/ Go to the previous part of the current word.
3840 Go to Next Word Part Ctrl-\\ Go to the next part of the current word.
3841 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3845 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3846 Action Default shortcut Description
3847 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3848 Fullscreen F11 (C) Switches to fullscreen mode.
3850 Toggle Messages Window Toggles the message window (status and compiler
3851 messages) on and off.
3853 Toggle Sidebar Shows or hides the sidebar.
3855 Toggle all additional widgets Hide and show all additional widgets like the
3856 notebook tabs, the toolbar, the messages window
3859 Zoom In Ctrl-+ (C) Zooms in the text.
3861 Zoom Out Ctrl-- (C) Zooms out the text.
3863 Zoom Reset Ctrl-0 Reset any previous zoom on the text.
3864 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3868 ================================ ========================= ==================================================
3869 Action Default shortcut Description
3870 ================================ ========================= ==================================================
3871 Switch to Editor F2 Switches to editor widget.
3872 Also reshows the document statistics line
3873 (after a short timeout).
3875 Switch to Search Bar F7 Switches to the search bar in the toolbar (if
3878 Switch to Message Window Focus the Message Window's current tab.
3880 Switch to Compiler Focus the Compiler message window tab.
3882 Switch to Messages Focus the Messages message window tab.
3884 Switch to Scribble F6 Switches to scribble widget.
3886 Switch to VTE F4 Switches to VTE widget.
3888 Switch to Sidebar Focus the Sidebar.
3890 Switch to Sidebar Symbol List Focus the Symbol list tab in the Sidebar
3893 Switch to Sidebar Document List Focus the Document list tab in the Sidebar
3895 ================================ ========================= ==================================================
3898 Notebook tab keybindings
3899 ````````````````````````
3900 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3901 Action Default shortcut Description
3902 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3903 Switch to left document Ctrl-PageUp (C) Switches to the previous open document.
3905 Switch to right document Ctrl-PageDown (C) Switches to the next open document.
3907 Switch to last used document Ctrl-Tab Switches to the previously shown document (if it's
3909 Holding Ctrl (or another modifier if the keybinding
3910 has been changed) will show a dialog, then repeated
3911 presses of the keybinding will switch to the 2nd-last
3912 used document, 3rd-last, etc. Also known as
3913 Most-Recently-Used documents switching.
3915 Move document left Ctrl-Shift-PageUp Changes the current document with the left hand
3918 Move document right Ctrl-Shift-PageDown Changes the current document with the right hand
3921 Move document first Moves the current document to the first position.
3923 Move document last Moves the current document to the last position.
3924 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3927 Document keybindings
3928 ````````````````````
3929 ==================================== ==================== ==================================================
3930 Action Default shortcut Description
3931 ==================================== ==================== ==================================================
3932 Clone See `Cloning documents`_.
3934 Replace tabs with space Replaces all tabs with the right amount of spaces
3935 in the whole document, or the current selection.
3937 Replace spaces with tabs Replaces leading spaces with tab characters in the
3938 whole document, or the current selection.
3940 Toggle current fold Toggles the folding state of the current code block.
3942 Fold all Folds all contractible code blocks.
3944 Unfold all Unfolds all contracted code blocks.
3946 Reload symbol list Ctrl-Shift-R Reloads the symbol list.
3948 Toggle Line wrapping Enables or disables wrapping of long lines.
3950 Toggle Line breaking Enables or disables automatic breaking of long
3951 lines at a configurable column.
3953 Remove Markers Remove any markers on lines or words which
3954 were set by using 'Mark All' in the
3955 search dialog or by manually marking lines.
3957 Remove Error Indicators Remove any error indicators in the
3960 Remove Markers and Error Indicators Combines ``Remove Markers`` and
3961 ``Remove Error Indicators``.
3962 ==================================== ==================== ==================================================
3967 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3968 Action Default shortcut Description
3969 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3970 New Create a new project.
3971 Open Opens a project file.
3972 Properties Shows project properties.
3973 Close Close the current project.
3974 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3979 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3980 Action Default shortcut Description
3981 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
3982 Compile F8 Compiles the current file.
3984 Build F9 Builds (compiles if necessary and links) the
3987 Make all Shift-F9 Builds the current file with the Make tool.
3989 Make custom target Ctrl-Shift-F9 Builds the current file with the Make tool and a
3992 Make object Shift-F8 Compiles the current file with the Make tool.
3994 Next error Jumps to the line with the next error from the
3997 Previous error Jumps to the line with the previous error from
3998 the last build process.
4000 Run F5 Executes the current file in a terminal emulation.
4002 Set Build Commands Opens the build commands dialog.
4003 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
4008 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
4009 Action Default shortcut Description
4010 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
4011 Show Color Chooser Opens the Color Chooser dialog.
4012 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
4017 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
4018 Action Default shortcut Description
4019 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
4020 Help F1 (C) Opens the manual.
4021 =============================== ========================= ==================================================
4029 You must use UTF-8 encoding *without BOM* for configuration files.
4032 Configuration file paths
4033 ------------------------
4034 Geany has default configuration files installed for the system and
4035 also per-user configuration files.
4037 The system files should not normally be edited because they will be
4038 overwritten when upgrading Geany.
4040 The user configuration directory can be overridden with the ``-c``
4041 switch, but this is not normally done. See `Command line options`_.
4044 Any missing subdirectories in the user configuration directory
4045 will be created when Geany starts.
4047 You can check the paths Geany is using with *Help->Debug Messages*.
4048 Near the top there should be 2 lines with something like::
4050 Geany-INFO: System data dir: /usr/share/geany
4051 Geany-INFO: User config dir: /home/username/.config/geany
4054 Paths on Unix-like systems
4055 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4056 The system path is ``$prefix/share/geany``, where ``$prefix`` is the
4057 path where Geany is installed (see `Installation prefix`_).
4059 The user configuration directory is normally:
4060 ``/home/username/.config/geany``
4064 The system path is the ``data`` subfolder of the installation path
4067 The user configuration directory might vary, but on Windows XP it's:
4068 ``C:\Documents and Settings\UserName\Application Data\geany``
4069 On Windows 7 and above you most likely will find it at:
4070 ``C:\users\UserName\Roaming\geany``
4075 There's a *Configuration files* submenu in the *Tools* menu that
4076 contains items for some of the available user configuration files.
4077 Clicking on one opens it in the editor for you to update. Geany will
4078 reload the file after you have saved it.
4081 Other configuration files not shown here will need to be opened
4082 manually, and will not be automatically reloaded when saved.
4083 (see *Reload Configuration* below).
4085 There's also a *Reload Configuration* item which can be used if you
4086 updated one of the other configuration files, or modified or added
4089 *Reload Configuration* is also necessary to update syntax highlighting colors.
4092 Syntax highlighting colors aren't updated in open documents after
4093 saving filetypes.common as this may take a significant
4097 Customizing Geany's appearance using GTK+ CSS
4098 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4100 To override GTK+ CSS styles, you can use traditional mechanisms or you
4101 can use the *Tools->Configuration files* menu to open a file named
4102 ``geany.css`` which will be loaded after other CSS styles
4103 are applied to allow overriding the default styles.
4105 Geany offers a number of CSS IDs which can be used to taylor its
4106 appearance. Among the more interesting include:
4108 * ``geany-compiler-context`` - the style used for build command output surrounding errors
4109 * ``geany-compiler-error`` - the style used for build command errors
4110 * ``geany-compiler-message`` - the style other output encountered while running build command
4111 * ``geany-document-status-changed`` - the style for document tab labels when the document is changed
4112 * ``geany-document-status-disk-changed`` - the style for document tab labels when the file on disk has changed
4113 * ``geany-document-status-readyonly``` - the style for document tab labels when the document is read-only
4114 * ``geany-search-entry-no-match`` - the style of find/replace dialog entries when no match is found
4115 * ``geany-terminal-dirty`` - the style for the message window Terminal tab label when the terminal output has changed.
4118 Global configuration file
4119 -------------------------
4121 System administrators can add a global configuration file for Geany
4122 which will be used when starting Geany and a user configuration file
4125 The global configuration file is read from ``geany.conf`` in the
4126 system configuration path - see `Configuration file paths`_. It can
4127 contain any settings which are found in the usual configuration file
4128 created by Geany, but does not have to contain all settings.
4131 This feature is mainly intended for package maintainers or system
4132 admins who want to set up Geany in a multi user environment and
4133 set some sane default values for this environment. Usually users won't
4138 Filetype definition files
4139 -------------------------
4141 All color definitions and other filetype specific settings are
4142 stored in the filetype definition files. Those settings are colors
4143 for syntax highlighting, general settings like comment characters or
4144 word delimiter characters as well as compiler and linker settings.
4146 See also `Configuration file paths`_.
4150 Each filetype has a corresponding filetype definition file. The format
4151 for built-in filetype `Foo` is::
4155 The extension is normally just the filetype name in lower case.
4157 However there are some exceptions:
4159 =============== =========
4161 =============== =========
4165 Matlab/Octave matlab
4166 =============== =========
4168 There is also the `special file filetypes.common`_.
4170 For `custom filetypes`_, the filename for `Foo` is different::
4174 See the link for details.
4178 The system-wide filetype configuration files can be found in the
4179 system configuration path and are called ``filetypes.$ext``,
4180 where $ext is the name of the filetype. For every
4181 filetype there is a corresponding definition file. There is one
4182 exception: ``filetypes.common`` -- this file is for general settings,
4183 which are not specific to a certain filetype.
4186 It is not recommended that users edit the system-wide files,
4187 because they will be overridden when Geany is updated.
4191 To change the settings, copy a file from the system configuration
4192 path to the subdirectory ``filedefs`` in your user configuration
4193 directory. Then you can edit the file and the changes will still be
4194 available after an update of Geany.
4196 Alternatively, you can create the file yourself and add only the
4197 settings you want to change. All missing settings will be read from
4198 the corresponding system configuration file.
4202 At startup Geany looks for ``filetypes.*.conf`` files in the system and
4203 user filetype paths, adding any filetypes found with the name matching
4204 the '``*``' wildcard - e.g. ``filetypes.Bar.conf``.
4206 Custom filetypes are not as powerful as built-in filetypes, but
4207 support for the following has been implemented:
4209 * Recognizing and setting the filetype (after the user has manually updated
4210 the `filetype extensions`_ file).
4211 * `Filetype group membership`_.
4212 * Reading filetype settings in the ``[settings]`` section, including:
4213 * Using an existing syntax highlighting lexer (`lexer_filetype`_ key).
4214 * Using an existing tags parser (`tag_parser`_ key).
4215 * Build commands (``[build-menu]`` section).
4216 * Loading global tags files (sharing the ``tag_parser`` filetype's namespace).
4218 See `Filetype configuration`_ for details on each setting.
4220 Creating a custom filetype from an existing filetype
4221 ````````````````````````````````````````````````````
4222 Because most filetype settings will relate to the syntax
4223 highlighting (e.g. styling, keywords, ``lexer_properties``
4224 sections), it is best to copy an existing filetype file that uses
4225 the lexer you wish to use as the basis of a custom filetype, using
4226 the correct filename extension format shown above, e.g.::
4228 cp filetypes.foo filetypes.Bar.conf
4230 Then add the ``lexer_filetype=Foo`` setting (if not already present)
4231 and add/adjust other settings.
4234 The ``[styling]`` and ``[keywords]`` sections have key names
4235 specific to each filetype/lexer. You must follow the same
4236 names - in particular, some lexers only support one keyword
4240 Filetype configuration
4241 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4243 As well as the sections listed below, each filetype file can contain
4244 a [build-menu] section as described in `[build-menu] section`_.
4249 In this section the colors for syntax highlighting are defined. The
4252 * ``key=foreground_color;background_color;bold_flag;italic_flag``
4254 Colors have to be specified as RGB hex values prefixed by
4255 0x or # similar to HTML/CSS hex triplets. For example, all of the following
4256 are valid values for pure red; 0xff0000, 0xf00, #ff0000, or #f00. The
4257 values are case-insensitive but it is a good idea to use lower-case.
4258 Note that you can also use *named colors* as well by substituting the
4259 color value with the name of a color as defined in the ``[named_colors]``
4260 section, see the `[named_colors] Section`_ for more information.
4262 Bold and italic are flags and should only be "true" or "false". If their
4263 value is something other than "true" or "false", "false" is assumed.
4265 You can omit fields to use the values from the style named ``"default"``.
4267 E.g. ``key=0xff0000;;true``
4269 This makes the key style have red foreground text, default background
4270 color text and bold emphasis.
4274 The second format uses a *named style* name to reference a style
4275 defined in filetypes.common.
4277 * ``key=named_style``
4278 * ``key2=named_style2,bold,italic``
4280 The bold and italic parts are optional, and if present are used to
4281 toggle the bold or italic flags to the opposite of the named style's
4282 flags. In contrast to style definition booleans, they are a literal
4283 ",bold,italic" and commas are used instead of semi-colons.
4285 E.g. ``key=comment,italic``
4287 This makes the key style match the ``"comment"`` named style, but with
4290 To define named styles, see the filetypes.common `[named_styles]
4293 Reading styles from another filetype
4294 ************************************
4295 You can automatically copy all of the styles from another filetype
4296 definition file by using the following syntax for the ``[styling]``
4301 Where Foo is a filetype name. The corresponding ``[styling]``
4302 section from ``filetypes.foo`` will be read.
4304 This is useful when the same lexer is being used for multiple
4305 filetypes (e.g. C/C++/C#/Java/etc). For example, to make the C++
4306 styling the same as the C styling, you would put the following in
4315 This section contains keys for different keyword lists specific to
4316 the filetype. Some filetypes do not support keywords, so adding a
4317 new key will not work. You can only add or remove keywords to/from
4321 The keywords list must be in one line without line ending characters.
4324 [lexer_properties] section
4325 ``````````````````````````
4326 Here any special properties for the Scintilla lexer can be set in the
4327 format ``key.name.field=some.value``.
4329 Properties Geany uses are listed in the system filetype files. To find
4330 other properties you need Geany's source code::
4332 egrep -o 'GetProperty\w*\("([^"]+)"[^)]+\)' scintilla/Lex*.cxx
4339 This is the default file extension used when saving files, not
4340 including the period character (``.``). The extension used should
4341 match one of the patterns associated with that filetype (see
4342 `Filetype extensions`_).
4344 *Example:* ``extension=cxx``
4347 These characters define word boundaries when making selections
4348 and searching using word matching options.
4350 *Example:* (look at system filetypes.\* files)
4353 This overrides the *wordchars* filetypes.common setting, and
4354 has precedence over the *whitespace_chars* setting.
4357 A character or string which is used to comment code. If you want to use
4358 multiline comments only, don't set this but rather comment_open and
4361 Single-line comments are used in priority over multiline comments to
4362 comment a line, e.g. with the `Comment/Uncomment line` command.
4364 *Example:* ``comment_single=//``
4367 A character or string which is used to comment code. You need to also
4368 set comment_close to really use multiline comments. If you want to use
4369 single-line comments, prefer setting comment_single.
4371 Multiline comments are used in priority over single-line comments to
4372 comment a block, e.g. template comments.
4374 *Example:* ``comment_open=/*``
4377 If multiline comments are used, this is the character or string to
4380 *Example:* ``comment_close=*/``
4383 Set this to false if a comment character or string should start at
4384 column 0 of a line. If set to true it uses any indentation of the
4387 Note: Comment indentation
4389 ``comment_use_indent=true`` would generate this if a line is
4390 commented (e.g. with Ctrl-D)::
4394 ``comment_use_indent=false`` would generate this if a line is
4395 commented (e.g. with Ctrl-D)::
4397 # command_example();
4400 Note: This setting only works for single line comments (like '//',
4403 *Example:* ``comment_use_indent=true``
4406 A command which can be executed on the current word or the current
4409 Example usage: Open the API documentation for the
4410 current function call at the cursor position.
4413 be set for every filetype or if not set, a global command will
4414 be used. The command itself can be specified without the full
4415 path, then it is searched in $PATH. But for security reasons,
4416 it is recommended to specify the full path to the command. The
4417 wildcard %s will be replaced by the current word at the cursor
4418 position or by the current selection.
4420 Hint: for PHP files the following could be quite useful:
4421 context_action_cmd=firefox "https://www.php.net/%s"
4423 *Example:* ``context_action_cmd=devhelp -s "%s"``
4428 The TagManager language name, e.g. "C". Usually the same as the
4434 A filetype name to setup syntax highlighting from another filetype.
4435 This must not be recursive, i.e. it should be a filetype name that
4436 doesn't use the *lexer_filetype* key itself, e.g.::
4441 The second line is wrong, because ``filetypes.cpp`` itself uses
4442 ``lexer_filetype=C``, which would be recursive.
4444 symbol_list_sort_mode
4445 What the default symbol list sort order should be.
4447 ===== ========================================
4449 ===== ========================================
4450 0 Sort symbols by name
4451 1 Sort symbols by appearance (line number)
4452 ===== ========================================
4454 .. _xml_indent_tags:
4457 If this setting is set to *true*, a new line after a line ending with an
4458 unclosed XML/HTML tag will be automatically indented. This only applies
4459 to filetypes for which the HTML or XML lexer is used. Such filetypes have
4460 this setting in their system configuration files.
4463 The MIME type for this file type, e.g. "text/x-csrc". This is used
4464 for example to chose the icon to display for this file type.
4467 [indentation] section
4468 `````````````````````
4470 This section allows definition of default indentation settings specific to
4471 the file type, overriding the ones configured in the preferences. This can
4472 be useful for file types requiring specific indentation settings (e.g. tabs
4473 only for Makefile). These settings don't override auto-detection if activated.
4476 The forced indentation width.
4479 The forced indentation type.
4481 ===== =======================
4482 Value Indentation type
4483 ===== =======================
4486 2 Mixed (tabs and spaces)
4487 ===== =======================
4490 [build-menu] filetype section
4491 `````````````````````````````
4492 This supports the same keys as the ``geany.conf`` `[build-menu] section`_.
4497 FT_00_CM=gcc -c "%f"
4500 FT_01_CM=gcc -o "%e" "%f"
4505 error_regex=^([^:]+):([0-9]+):
4507 [build_settings] section
4508 ````````````````````````
4509 As of Geany 0.19 this section is for legacy support.
4510 Values that are set in the [build-menu] section will override those in this section.
4512 If any build menu item settings have been configured in the
4513 `Set Build Commands dialog`_ (or the *Build* tab of the
4514 `Project Properties`_ dialog), then these settings are stored in the
4515 [build-menu] section and will override the settings in this section for
4519 See the [build-menu] section for details.
4524 This item specifies the command to compile source code files. But
4525 it is also possible to use it with interpreted languages like Perl
4526 or Python. With these filetypes you can use this option as a kind of
4527 syntax parser, which sends output to the compiler message window.
4529 You should quote the filename to also support filenames with
4530 spaces. The following wildcards for filenames are available:
4532 * %f -- complete filename without path
4533 * %e -- filename without path and without extension
4535 *Example:* ``compiler=gcc -Wall -c "%f"``
4538 This item specifies the command to link the file. If the file is not
4539 already compiled, it will be compiled while linking. The -o option
4540 is automatically added by Geany. This item works well with GNU gcc,
4541 but may be problematic with other compilers (esp. with the linker).
4543 *Example:* ``linker=gcc -Wall "%f"``
4546 Use this item to execute your file. It has to have been built
4547 already. Use the %e wildcard to have only the name of the executable
4548 (i.e. without extension) or use the %f wildcard if you need the
4549 complete filename, e.g. for shell scripts.
4551 *Example:* ``run_cmd="./%e"``
4554 Special file filetypes.common
4555 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4557 There is a special filetype definition file called
4558 filetypes.common. This file defines some general non-filetype-specific
4561 You can open the user filetypes.common with the
4562 *Tools->Configuration Files->filetypes.common* menu item. This adds
4563 the default settings to the user file if the file doesn't exist.
4564 Alternatively the file can be created manually, adding only the
4565 settings you want to change. All missing settings will be read from
4569 See the `Filetype configuration`_ section for how to define styles.
4572 [named_styles] section
4573 ``````````````````````
4574 Named styles declared here can be used in the [styling] section of any
4579 *In filetypes.common*::
4582 foo=0xc00000;0xffffff;false;true
4590 This saves copying and pasting the whole style definition into several
4594 You can define aliases for named styles, as shown with the ``bar``
4595 entry in the above example, but they must be declared after the
4599 [named_colors] section
4600 ``````````````````````
4601 Named colors declared here can be used in the ``[styling]`` or
4602 ``[named_styles]`` section of any filetypes.* file or color scheme.
4607 my_red_color=#FF0000
4608 my_blue_color=#0000FF
4611 foo=my_red_color;my_blue_color;false;true
4613 This allows to define a color palette by name so that to change a color
4614 scheme-wide only involves changing the hex value in a single location.
4619 This is the default style. It is used for styling files without a
4622 *Example:* ``default=0x000000;0xffffff;false;false``
4625 The style for coloring selected text. The format is:
4629 * Use foreground color
4630 * Use background color
4632 The colors are only set if the 3rd or 4th argument is true. When
4633 the colors are not overridden, the default is a dark grey
4634 background with syntax highlighted foreground text.
4636 *Example:* ``selection=0xc0c0c0;0x00007F;true;true``
4639 The style for brace highlighting when a matching brace was found.
4641 *Example:* ``brace_good=0xff0000;0xFFFFFF;true;false``
4644 The style for brace highlighting when no matching brace was found.
4646 *Example:* ``brace_bad=0x0000ff;0xFFFFFF;true;false``
4649 The style for coloring the caret(the blinking cursor). Only first
4650 and third argument is interpreted.
4651 Set the third argument to true to change the caret into a block caret.
4653 *Example:* ``caret=0x000000;0x0;false;false``
4656 The width for the caret(the blinking cursor). Only the first
4657 argument is interpreted. The width is specified in pixels with
4658 a maximum of three pixel. Use the width 0 to make the caret
4661 *Example:* ``caret_width=3``
4664 The style for coloring the background of the current line. Only
4665 the second and third arguments are interpreted. The second argument
4666 is the background color. Use the third argument to enable or
4667 disable background highlighting for the current line (has to be
4670 *Example:* ``current_line=0x0;0xe5e5e5;true;false``
4673 The style for coloring the indentation guides. Only the first and
4674 second arguments are interpreted.
4676 *Example:* ``indent_guide=0xc0c0c0;0xffffff;false;false``
4679 The style for coloring the white space if it is shown. The first
4680 both arguments define the foreground and background colors, the
4681 third argument sets whether to use the defined foreground color
4682 or to use the color defined by each filetype for the white space.
4683 The fourth argument defines whether to use the background color.
4685 *Example:* ``white_space=0xc0c0c0;0xffffff;true;true``
4688 Line number margin foreground and background colors.
4690 .. _Folding Settings:
4693 Fold margin foreground and background colors.
4695 fold_symbol_highlight
4696 Highlight color of folding symbols.
4699 The style of folding icons. Only first and second arguments are
4702 Valid values for the first argument are:
4709 Valid values for the second argument are:
4712 * 1 -- for straight lines
4713 * 2 -- for curved lines
4715 *Default:* ``folding_style=1;1;``
4717 *Arrows:* ``folding_style=3;0;``
4720 Draw a thin horizontal line at the line where text is folded. Only
4721 first argument is used.
4723 Valid values for the first argument are:
4725 * 0 -- disable, do not draw a line
4726 * 1 -- draw the line above folded text
4727 * 2 -- draw the line below folded text
4729 *Example:* ``folding_horiz_line=0;0;false;false``
4732 First argument: drawing of visual flags to indicate a line is wrapped.
4733 This is a bitmask of the values:
4735 * 0 -- No visual flags
4736 * 1 -- Visual flag at end of subline of a wrapped line
4737 * 2 -- Visual flag at begin of subline of a wrapped line. Subline is
4738 indented by at least 1 to make room for the flag.
4740 Second argument: wether the visual flags to indicate a line is wrapped
4741 are drawn near the border or near the text. This is a bitmask of the values:
4743 * 0 -- Visual flags drawn near border
4744 * 1 -- Visual flag at end of subline drawn near text
4745 * 2 -- Visual flag at begin of subline drawn near text
4747 Only first and second arguments are interpreted.
4749 *Example:* ``line_wrap_visuals=3;0;false;false``
4752 First argument: sets the size of indentation of sublines for wrapped lines
4753 in terms of the width of a space, only used when the second argument is ``0``.
4755 Second argument: wrapped sublines can be indented to the position of their
4756 first subline or one more indent level. Possible values:
4758 * 0 - Wrapped sublines aligned to left of window plus amount set by the first argument
4759 * 1 - Wrapped sublines are aligned to first subline indent (use the same indentation)
4760 * 2 - Wrapped sublines are aligned to first subline indent plus one more level of indentation
4762 Only first and second arguments are interpreted.
4764 *Example:* ``line_wrap_indent=0;1;false;false``
4767 Translucency for the current line (first argument) and the selection
4768 (second argument). Values between 0 and 256 are accepted.
4770 Note for Windows 95, 98 and ME users:
4771 keep this value at 256 to disable translucency otherwise Geany might crash.
4773 Only the first and second arguments are interpreted.
4775 *Example:* ``translucency=256;256;false;false``
4778 The style for a highlighted line (e.g when using Goto line or goto symbol).
4779 The foreground color (first argument) is only used when the Markers margin
4780 is enabled (see View menu).
4782 Only the first and second arguments are interpreted.
4784 *Example:* ``marker_line=0x000000;0xffff00;false;false``
4787 The style for a marked search results (when using "Mark" in Search dialogs).
4788 The second argument sets the background color for the drawn rectangle.
4790 Only the second argument is interpreted.
4792 *Example:* ``marker_search=0x000000;0xb8f4b8;false;false``
4795 The style for a marked line (e.g when using the "Toggle Marker" keybinding
4796 (Ctrl-M)). The foreground color (first argument) is only used
4797 when the Markers margin is enabled (see View menu).
4799 Only the first and second arguments are interpreted.
4801 *Example:* ``marker_mark=0x000000;0xb8f4b8;false;false``
4804 Translucency for the line marker (first argument) and the search marker
4805 (second argument). Values between 0 and 256 are accepted.
4807 Note for Windows 95, 98 and ME users:
4808 keep this value at 256 to disable translucency otherwise Geany might crash.
4810 Only the first and second arguments are interpreted.
4812 *Example:* ``marker_translucency=256;256;false;false``
4815 Amount of space to be drawn above and below the line's baseline.
4816 The first argument defines the amount of space to be drawn above the line, the second
4817 argument defines the amount of space to be drawn below.
4819 Only the first and second arguments are interpreted.
4821 *Example:* ``line_height=0;0;false;false``
4824 The style for coloring the calltips. The first two arguments
4825 define the foreground and background colors, the third and fourth
4826 arguments set whether to use the defined colors.
4828 *Example:* ``calltips=0xc0c0c0;0xffffff;false;false``
4831 The color of the error indicator.
4833 Only the first argument (foreground color) is used.
4835 *Example:* ``indicator_error=0xff0000``
4841 Characters to treat as whitespace. These characters are ignored
4842 when moving, selecting and deleting across word boundaries
4843 (see `Scintilla keyboard commands`_).
4845 This should include space (\\s) and tab (\\t).
4847 *Example:* ``whitespace_chars=\s\t!\"#$%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?@[\\]^`{|}~``
4850 These characters define word boundaries when making selections
4851 and searching using word matching options.
4853 *Example:* ``wordchars=_abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0123456789``
4856 This has precedence over the *whitespace_chars* setting.
4864 To change the default filetype extension used when saving a new file,
4865 see `Filetype definition files`_.
4867 You can override the list of file extensions that Geany uses to detect
4868 filetypes using the user ``filetype_extensions.conf`` file. Use the
4869 *Tools->Configuration Files->filetype_extensions.conf* menu item. See
4870 also `Configuration file paths`_.
4872 You should only list lines for filetype extensions that you want to
4873 override in the user configuration file and remove or comment out
4874 others. The patterns are listed after the ``=`` sign, using a
4875 semi-colon separated list of patterns which should be matched for
4878 For example, to override the filetype extensions for Make, the file
4882 Make=Makefile*;*.mk;Buildfile;
4884 Filetype group membership
4885 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4886 Filetype groups are used in the `Document->Set Filetype` menu.
4888 Group membership is also stored in ``filetype_extensions.conf``. This
4889 file is used to store information Geany needs at startup, whereas the
4890 separate filetype definition files hold information only needed when
4891 a document with their filetype is used.
4893 The format looks like::
4902 The key names cannot be configured.
4905 Group membership is only read at startup.
4908 You can make commonly used filetypes appear in the top-level of the
4909 filetype menu by adding them to the `None` group, e.g.
4912 Preferences file format
4913 -----------------------
4915 The user preferences file ``geany.conf`` holds settings for all the items configured
4916 in the preferences dialog. This file should not be edited while Geany is running
4917 as the file will be overwritten when the preferences in Geany are changed or Geany
4921 [build-menu] section
4922 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4924 The [build-menu] section contains the configuration of the build menu.
4925 This section can occur in filetype, preferences and project files and
4926 always has the format described here. Different menu items are loaded
4927 from different files, see the table in the `Build Menu Configuration`_
4928 section for details. All the settings can be configured from the dialogs
4929 except the execute command in filetype files and filetype definitions in
4930 the project file, so these are the only ones which need hand editing.
4934 The build-menu section stores one entry for each setting for each menu item that
4935 is configured. The keys for these settings have the format:
4941 * GG - is the menu item group,
4943 - FT for filetype build
4944 - NF for independent (non-filetype) build
4947 * NN - is a two decimal digit number of the item within the group,
4949 * FF - is the field,
4953 - WD for working directory
4955 See `[build-menu] filetype section`_ for an example.
4957 Error regular expression
4958 ````````````````````````
4960 This is a Perl-compatible regular expression (PCRE) to parse a filename
4961 (absolute or relative) and line number from the build output.
4962 If undefined, Geany will fall back to its default error message parsing.
4964 Only the first two match groups will be read by Geany. These groups can
4965 occur in any order: the match group consisting of only digits will be used
4966 as the line number, and the other group as the filename. In no group
4967 consists of only digits, the match will fail.
4969 *Example:* ``error_regex=^(.+):([0-9]+):[0-9]+``
4971 This will parse a message such as:
4972 ``test.py:7:24: E202 whitespace before ']'``
4978 The project file contains project related settings and possibly a
4979 record of the current session files.
4982 [build-menu] additions
4983 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4985 The project file also can have extra fields in the [build-menu] section
4986 in addition to those listed in `[build-menu] section`_ above.
4988 When filetype menu items are configured for the project they are stored
4989 in the project file.
4991 The ``filetypes`` entry is a list of the filetypes which exist in the
4994 For each filetype the entries for that filetype have the format defined in
4995 `[build-menu] section`_ but the key is prefixed by the name of the filetype
4996 as it appears in the ``filetypes`` entry, eg the entry for the label of
4997 filetype menu item 0 for the C filetype would be
5005 Geany supports the following templates:
5009 * Function description
5014 To use these templates, just open the Edit menu or open the popup menu
5015 by right-clicking in the editor widget, and choose "Insert Comments"
5016 and insert templates as you want.
5018 Some templates (like File header or ChangeLog entry) will always be
5019 inserted at the top of the file.
5021 To insert a function description, the cursor must be inside
5022 of the function, so that the function name can be determined
5023 automatically. The description will be positioned correctly one line
5024 above the function, just check it out. If the cursor is not inside
5025 of a function or the function name cannot be determined, the inserted
5026 function description won't contain the correct function name but "unknown"
5030 Geany automatically reloads template information when it notices you
5031 save a file in the user's template configuration directory. You can
5032 also force this by selecting *Tools->Reload Configuration*.
5038 Meta data can be used with all templates, but by default user set
5039 meta data is only used for the ChangeLog and File header templates.
5041 In the configuration dialog you can find a tab "Templates" (see
5042 `Template preferences`_). You can define the default values
5043 which will be inserted in the templates.
5049 File templates are templates used as the basis of a new file. To
5050 use them, choose the *New (with Template)* menu item from the *File*
5051 menu. If there is more than one template for a filetype then they
5052 will be grouped in a submenu.
5054 By default, file templates are installed for some filetypes. Custom
5055 file templates can be added by creating the appropriate template file. You can
5056 also edit the default file templates.
5058 The file's contents are just the text to place in the document, with
5059 optional template wildcards like ``{fileheader}``. The fileheader
5060 wildcard can be placed anywhere, but it's usually put on the first
5061 line of the file, followed by a blank line.
5063 Adding file templates
5064 `````````````````````
5066 File templates are read from ``templates/files`` under the
5067 `Configuration file paths`_.
5069 The filetype to use is detected from the template file's extension, if
5070 any. For example, creating a file ``module.c`` would add a menu item
5071 which created a new document with the filetype set to 'C'.
5073 The template file is read from disk when the corresponding menu item is
5077 Customizing templates
5078 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5080 Each template can be customized to your needs. The templates are
5081 stored in the ``~/.config/geany/templates/`` directory (see the section called
5082 `Command line options`_ for further information about the configuration
5083 directory). Just open the desired template with an editor (ideally,
5084 Geany ;-) ) and edit the template to your needs. There are some
5085 wildcards which will be automatically replaced by Geany at startup.
5091 All wildcards must be enclosed by "{" and "}", e.g. {date}.
5093 **Wildcards for character escaping**
5095 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5096 Wildcard Description Available in
5097 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5098 ob { Opening Brace (used to prevent other file templates, file header, snippets.
5099 wildcards being expanded).
5100 cb } Closing Brace. file templates, file header, snippets.
5101 pc \% Percent (used to escape e.g. ``%block%``
5102 in snippets). snippets.
5103 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5108 These are configurable, see `Template preferences`_.
5110 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5111 Wildcard Description Available in
5112 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5113 developer The name of the developer. file templates, file header,
5114 function description, ChangeLog entry,
5117 initial The developer's initials, e.g. "ET" for file templates, file header,
5118 Enrico Tröger or "JFD" for John Foobar Doe. function description, ChangeLog entry,
5121 mail The email address of the developer. file templates, file header,
5122 function description, ChangeLog entry,
5125 company The company the developer is working for. file templates, file header,
5126 function description, ChangeLog entry,
5129 version The initial version of a new file. file templates, file header,
5130 function description, ChangeLog entry,
5132 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5134 Date & time wildcards
5135 *********************
5137 The format for these wildcards can be changed in the preferences
5138 dialog, see `Template preferences`_. For a list of available conversion
5139 specifiers see https://docs.gtk.org/glib/method.DateTime.format.html.
5141 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5142 Wildcard Description Available in
5143 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5144 year The current year. Default format is: YYYY. file templates, file header,
5145 function description, ChangeLog entry,
5148 date The current date. Default format: file templates, file header,
5149 YYYY-MM-DD. function description, ChangeLog entry,
5152 datetime The current date and time. Default format: file templates, file header,
5153 DD.MM.YYYY HH:mm:ss ZZZZ. function description, ChangeLog entry,
5155 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5160 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5161 Wildcard Description Available in
5162 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5163 untitled The string "untitled" (this will be file templates, file header,
5164 translated to your locale), used in function description, ChangeLog entry,
5165 file templates. bsd, gpl, snippets.
5167 geanyversion The actual Geany version, e.g. file templates, file header,
5168 "Geany |(version)|". function description, ChangeLog entry,
5171 filename The filename of the current file. file header, snippets, file
5172 For new files, it's only replaced when templates.
5173 first saving if found on the first 4 lines
5176 project The current project's name, if any. file header, snippets, file templates.
5178 description The current project's description, if any. file header, snippets, file templates.
5180 functionname The function name of the function at the function description.
5181 cursor position. This wildcard will only be
5182 replaced in the function description
5185 command:path Executes the specified command and replace file templates, file header,
5186 the wildcard with the command's standard function description, ChangeLog entry,
5187 output. See `Special {command:} wildcard`_ bsd, gpl, snippets.
5189 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5191 Template insertion wildcards
5192 ****************************
5194 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5195 Wildcard Description Available in
5196 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5197 gpl This wildcard inserts a short GPL notice. file header.
5199 bsd This wildcard inserts a BSD licence notice. file header.
5201 fileheader The file header template. This wildcard snippets, file templates.
5202 will only be replaced in file templates.
5203 ============== ============================================= =======================================
5206 Special {command:} wildcard
5207 ***************************
5209 The ``{command:}`` wildcard is a special one because it can execute
5210 a specified command and put the command's output (stdout) into
5219 Linux localhost 2.6.9-023stab046.2-smp #1 SMP Mon Dec 10 15:04:55 MSK 2007 x86_64 GNU/Linux
5221 Using this wildcard you can insert nearly any arbitrary text into the
5224 In the environment of the executed command the variables
5225 ``GEANY_FILENAME``, ``GEANY_FILETYPE`` and ``GEANY_FUNCNAME`` are set.
5226 The value of these variables is filled in only if Geany knows about it.
5227 For example, ``GEANY_FUNCNAME`` is only filled within the function
5228 description template. However, these variables are *always* set,
5229 just maybe with an empty value.
5230 You can easily access them e.g. within an executed shell script using::
5236 If the specified command could not be found or not executed, the wildcard is substituted
5237 by an empty string. In such cases, you can find the occurred error message on Geany's
5238 standard error and in the *Help->Debug Messages* dialog.
5241 Customizing the toolbar
5242 -----------------------
5244 You can add, remove and reorder the elements in the toolbar by using
5245 the toolbar editor, or by manually editing the configuration file
5248 The toolbar editor can be opened from the preferences editor on the Toolbar tab or
5249 by right-clicking on the toolbar itself and choosing it from the menu.
5251 Manually editing the toolbar layout
5252 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5254 To override the system-wide configuration file, copy it to your user
5255 configuration directory (see `Configuration file paths`_).
5259 % cp /usr/local/share/geany/ui_toolbar.xml /home/username/.config/geany/
5261 Then edit it and add any of the available elements listed in the file or remove
5262 any of the existing elements. Of course, you can also reorder the elements as
5263 you wish and add or remove additional separators.
5264 This file must be valid XML, otherwise the global toolbar UI definition
5265 will be used instead.
5267 Your changes are applied once you save the file.
5270 (1) You cannot add new actions which are not listed below.
5271 (2) Everything you add or change must be inside the /ui/toolbar/ path.
5274 Available toolbar elements
5275 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5277 ================== ==============================================================================
5278 Element name Description
5279 ================== ==============================================================================
5280 New Create a new file
5281 Open Open an existing file
5282 Save Save the current file
5283 SaveAll Save all open files
5284 Reload Reload the current file from disk
5285 Close Close the current file
5286 CloseAll Close all open files
5287 Print Print the current file
5288 Cut Cut the current selection
5289 Copy Copy the current selection
5290 Paste Paste the contents of the clipboard
5291 Delete Delete the current selection
5292 Undo Undo the last modification
5293 Redo Redo the last modification
5294 NavBack Navigate back a location
5295 NavFor Navigate forward a location
5296 Compile Compile the current file
5297 Build Build the current file, includes a submenu for Make commands. Geany
5298 remembers the last chosen action from the submenu and uses this as default
5299 action when the button itself is clicked.
5300 Run Run or view the current file
5301 Color Open a color chooser dialog, to interactively pick colors from a palette
5302 ZoomIn Zoom in the text
5303 ZoomOut Zoom out the text
5304 UnIndent Decrease indentation
5305 Indent Increase indentation
5306 Replace Replace text in the current document
5307 SearchEntry The search field belonging to the 'Search' element (can be used alone)
5308 Search Find the entered text in the current file (only useful if you also
5310 GotoEntry The goto field belonging to the 'Goto' element (can be used alone)
5311 Goto Jump to the entered line number (only useful if you also use 'GotoEntry')
5312 Preferences Show the preferences dialog
5314 ================== ==============================================================================
5318 Plugin documentation
5319 ====================
5324 The HTML Characters plugin helps when working with special
5325 characters in XML/HTML, e.g. German Umlauts ü and ä.
5328 Insert entity dialog
5329 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5331 When the plugin is enabled, you can insert special character
5332 entities using *Tools->Insert Special HTML Characters*.
5334 This opens up a dialog where you can find a huge amount of special
5335 characters sorted by category that you might like to use inside your
5336 document. You can expand and collapse the categories by clicking on
5337 the little arrow on the left hand side. Once you have found the
5338 desired character click on it and choose "Insert". This will insert
5339 the entity for the character at the current cursor position. You
5340 might also like to double click the chosen entity instead.
5343 Replace special chars by its entity
5344 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5346 To help make a XML/HTML document valid the plugin supports
5347 replacement of special chars known by the plugin. Both bulk
5348 replacement and immediate replacement during typing are supported.
5350 A few characters will not be replaced. These are
5361 You can activate/deactivate this feature using the *Tools->HTML
5362 Replacement->Auto-replace Special Characters* menu item. If it's
5363 activated, all special characters (beside the given exceptions from
5364 above) known by the plugin will be replaced by their entities.
5366 You could also set a keybinding for the plugin to toggle the status
5373 After inserting a huge amount of text, e.g. by using copy & paste, the
5374 plugin allows bulk replacement of all known characters (beside the
5375 mentioned exceptions). You can find the function under the same
5376 menu at *Tools->HTML Replacement->Replace Characters in Selection*, or
5377 configure a keybinding for the plugin.
5386 This plugin provides an option to automatically save documents.
5387 You can choose to save the current document, or all of your documents, at
5394 You can save the current document when the editor's focus goes out.
5395 Every pop-up, menu dialogs, or anything else that can make the editor lose the focus,
5396 will make the current document to be saved.
5401 This plugin sets on every new file (*File->New* or *File->New (with template)*)
5402 a randomly chosen filename and set its filetype appropriate to the used template
5403 or when no template was used, to a configurable default filetype.
5404 This enables you to quickly compile, build and/or run the new file without the
5405 need to give it an explicit filename using the Save As dialog. This might be
5406 useful when you often create new files just for testing some code or something
5413 This plugin creates a backup copy of the current file in Geany when it is
5414 saved. You can specify the directory where the backup copy is saved and
5415 you can configure the automatically added extension in the configure dialog
5416 in Geany's plugin manager.
5418 After the plugin was loaded in Geany's plugin manager, every file is
5419 copied into the configured backup directory *after* the file has been saved
5422 The created backup copy file permissions are set to read-write only for
5423 the user. This should help to not create world-readable files on possibly
5424 unsecure destination directories like /tmp (especially useful
5425 on multi-user systems).
5426 This applies only to non-Windows systems. On Windows, no explicit file
5427 permissions are set.
5430 Additionally, you can define how many levels of the original file's
5431 directory structure should be replicated in the backup copy path.
5432 For example, setting the option
5433 *Directory levels to include in the backup destination* to *2*
5434 cause the plugin to create the last two components of the original
5435 file's path in the backup copy path and place the new file there.
5438 Contributing to this document
5439 =============================
5441 This document (``geany.txt``) is written in `reStructuredText`__
5442 (or "reST"). The source file for it is located in Geany's ``doc``
5443 subdirectory. If you intend on making changes, you should grab the
5444 source right from Git to make sure you've got the newest version.
5445 First, you need to configure the build system to generate the HTML
5446 documentation passing the *--enable-html-docs* option to the *configure*
5447 script. Then after editing the file, run ``make`` (from the root build
5448 directory or from the *doc* subdirectory) to build the HTML documentation
5449 and see how your changes look. This regenerates the ``geany.html`` file
5450 inside the *doc* subdirectory. To generate a PDF file, configure with
5451 *--enable-pdf-docs* and run ``make`` as for the HTML version. The generated
5452 PDF file is named geany-|(version)|.pdf and is located inside the *doc*
5455 __ https://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html
5457 After you are happy with your changes, create a patch e.g. by using::
5459 % git diff geany.txt > foo.patch
5461 or even better, by creating a Git-formatted patch which will keep authoring
5462 and description data, by first committing your changes (doing so in a fresh
5463 new branch is recommended for `master` not to diverge from upstream) and then
5464 using git format-patch::
5466 % git checkout -b my-documentation-changes # create a fresh branch
5467 % git commit geany.txt
5468 Write a good commit message...
5469 % git format-patch HEAD^
5470 % git checkout master # go back to master
5472 and then submit that file to the mailing list for review.
5474 Also you can clone the Geany repository at GitHub and send a pull request.
5476 Note, you will need the Python docutils software package installed
5477 to build the docs. The package is named ``python-docutils`` on Debian
5483 Scintilla keyboard commands
5484 ===========================
5486 Copyright © 1998, 2006 Neil Hodgson <neilh(at)scintilla(dot)org>
5488 This appendix is distributed under the terms of the License for
5489 Scintilla and SciTE. A copy of this license can be found in the file
5490 ``scintilla/License.txt`` included with the source code of this
5491 program and in the appendix of this document. See `License for
5492 Scintilla and SciTE`_.
5501 Keyboard commands for Scintilla mostly follow common Windows and GTK+
5502 conventions. All move keys (arrows, page up/down, home and end)
5503 allows to extend or reduce the stream selection when holding the
5504 Shift key, and the rectangular selection when holding the
5505 appropriate keys (see `Column mode editing (rectangular selections)`_).
5507 Some keys may not be available with some national keyboards
5508 or because they are taken by the system such as by a window manager
5509 or GTK. Keyboard equivalents of menu commands are listed in the
5510 menus. Some less common commands with no menu equivalent are:
5512 ============================================= ======================
5514 ============================================= ======================
5515 Magnify text size. Ctrl-Keypad+
5516 Reduce text size. Ctrl-Keypad-
5517 Restore text size to normal. Ctrl-Keypad/
5519 Dedent block. Shift-Tab
5520 Delete to start of word. Ctrl-BackSpace
5521 Delete to end of word. Ctrl-Delete
5522 Delete to start of line. Ctrl-Shift-BackSpace
5523 Go to start of document. Ctrl-Home
5524 Extend selection to start of document. Ctrl-Shift-Home
5525 Go to start of display line. Alt-Home
5526 Extend selection to start of display line. Alt-Shift-Home
5527 Go to end of document. Ctrl-End
5528 Extend selection to end of document. Ctrl-Shift-End
5529 Extend selection to end of display line. Alt-Shift-End
5530 Previous paragraph. Shift extends selection. Ctrl-Up
5531 Next paragraph. Shift extends selection. Ctrl-Down
5532 Previous word. Shift extends selection. Ctrl-Left
5533 Next word. Shift extends selection. Ctrl-Right
5534 ============================================= ======================
5545 * Double-click on empty space in the notebook tab bar to open a
5547 * Middle-click on a document's notebook tab to close the document.
5548 * Hold `Ctrl` and click on any notebook tab to switch to the last used
5550 * Double-click on a document's notebook tab to toggle all additional
5551 widgets (to show them again use the View menu or the keyboard
5552 shortcut). The interface pref must be enabled for this to work.
5557 * Alt-scroll wheel moves up/down a page.
5558 * Ctrl-scroll wheel zooms in/out.
5559 * Shift-scroll wheel scrolls 8 characters right/left.
5560 * Ctrl-click on a word in a document to perform *Go to Symbol Definition*.
5561 * Ctrl-click on a bracket/brace to perform *Go to Matching Brace*.
5566 * Double-click on a symbol-list group to expand or compact it.
5571 * Scrolling the mouse wheel over a notebook tab bar will switch
5574 The following are derived from X-Windows features (but GTK still supports
5577 * Middle-click pastes the last selected text.
5578 * Middle-click on a scrollbar moves the scrollbar to that
5579 position without having to drag it.
5583 Compile-time options
5584 ====================
5586 There are some options which can only be changed at compile time,
5587 and some options which are used as the default for configurable
5588 options. To change these options, edit the appropriate source file
5589 in the ``src`` subdirectory. Look for a block of lines starting with
5590 ``#define GEANY_*``. Any definitions which are not listed here should
5594 Most users should not need to change these options.
5599 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5600 Option Description Default
5601 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5602 GEANY_STRING_UNTITLED A string used as the default name for new untitled
5603 files. Be aware that the string can be
5604 translated, so change it only if you know
5606 GEANY_WINDOW_MINIMAL_WIDTH The minimal width of the main window. 620
5607 GEANY_WINDOW_MINIMAL_HEIGHT The minimal height of the main window. 440
5608 GEANY_WINDOW_DEFAULT_WIDTH The default width of the main window at the 900
5610 GEANY_WINDOW_DEFAULT_HEIGHT The default height of the main window at the 600
5612 **Windows specific**
5613 GEANY_USE_WIN32_DIALOG Set this to 1 if you want to use the default 0
5614 Windows file open and save dialogs instead
5615 GTK's file open and save dialogs. The
5616 default Windows file dialogs are missing
5617 some nice features like choosing a filetype
5618 or an encoding. *Do not touch this setting
5619 when building on a non-Win32 system.*
5620 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5625 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5626 Option Description Default
5627 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5628 GEANY_PROJECT_EXT The default filename extension for Geany geany
5629 project files. It is used when creating new
5630 projects and as filter mask for the project
5632 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5637 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5638 Option Description Default
5639 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5640 GEANY_FILETYPE_SEARCH_LINES The number of lines to search for the 2
5641 filetype with the extract filetype regex.
5642 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5647 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5648 Option Description Default
5649 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5650 GEANY_WORDCHARS These characters define word boundaries when a string with:
5651 making selections and searching using word a-z, A-Z, 0-9 and
5652 matching options. underscore.
5653 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5658 These are default settings that can be overridden in the `Preferences`_ dialog.
5660 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5661 Option Description Default
5662 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5663 GEANY_MIN_SYMBOLLIST_CHARS How many characters you need to type to 4
5664 trigger the autocompletion list.
5665 GEANY_DISK_CHECK_TIMEOUT Time in seconds between checking a file for 30
5667 GEANY_DEFAULT_TOOLS_MAKE The make tool. This can also include a path. "make"
5668 GEANY_DEFAULT_TOOLS_TERMINAL A terminal emulator command, see See below.
5669 `Terminal emulators`_.
5670 GEANY_DEFAULT_TOOLS_BROWSER A web browser. This can also include a path. "firefox"
5671 GEANY_DEFAULT_TOOLS_PRINTCMD A printing tool. It should be able to accept "lpr"
5672 and process plain text files. This can also
5674 GEANY_DEFAULT_TOOLS_GREP A grep tool. It should be compatible with "grep"
5675 GNU grep. This can also include a path.
5676 GEANY_DEFAULT_MRU_LENGTH The length of the "Recent files" list. 10
5677 GEANY_DEFAULT_FONT_SYMBOL_LIST The font used in sidebar to show symbols and "Sans 9"
5679 GEANY_DEFAULT_FONT_MSG_WINDOW The font used in the messages window. "Sans 9"
5680 GEANY_DEFAULT_FONT_EDITOR The font used in the editor window. "Monospace 10"
5681 GEANY_TOGGLE_MARK A string which is used to mark a toggled "~ "
5683 GEANY_MAX_AUTOCOMPLETE_WORDS How many autocompletion suggestions should 30
5685 GEANY_DEFAULT_FILETYPE_REGEX The default regex to extract filetypes from See below.
5687 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5691 The GEANY_DEFAULT_FILETYPE_REGEX default value is -\\*-\\s*([^\\s]+)\\s*-\\*- which finds Emacs filetypes.
5693 The GEANY_DEFAULT_TOOLS_TERMINAL default value on Windows is::
5697 and on any non-Windows system is::
5699 xterm -e "/bin/sh %c"
5705 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5706 Option Description Default
5707 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5708 GEANY_BUILD_ERR_HIGHLIGHT_MAX Amount of build error indicators to 50
5709 be shown in the editor window.
5710 This affects the special coloring
5711 when Geany detects a compiler output line as
5712 an error message and then highlights the
5713 corresponding line in the source code.
5714 Usually only the first few messages are
5715 interesting because following errors are
5717 All errors in the Compiler window are parsed
5718 and unaffected by this value.
5719 PRINTBUILDCMDS Every time a build menu item priority FALSE
5720 calculation is run, print the state of the
5721 menu item table in the form of the table
5722 in `Build Menu Configuration`_. May be
5723 useful to debug configuration file
5724 overloading. Warning produces a lot of
5725 output. Can also be enabled/disabled by the
5726 debugger by setting printbuildcmds to 1/0
5727 overriding the compile setting.
5728 ============================== ============================================ ==================
5732 GNU General Public License
5733 ==========================
5737 GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
5738 Version 2, June 1991
5740 Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5741 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
5742 Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
5743 of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
5747 The licenses for most software are designed to take away your
5748 freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public
5749 License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free
5750 software--to make sure the software is free for all its users. This
5751 General Public License applies to most of the Free Software
5752 Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to
5753 using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by
5754 the GNU Library General Public License instead.) You can apply it to
5757 When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not
5758 price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you
5759 have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for
5760 this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it
5761 if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it
5762 in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things.
5764 To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid
5765 anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights.
5766 These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you
5767 distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it.
5769 For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether
5770 gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that
5771 you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the
5772 source code. And you must show them these terms so they know their
5775 We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and
5776 (2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy,
5777 distribute and/or modify the software.
5779 Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain
5780 that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free
5781 software. If the software is modified by someone else and passed on, we
5782 want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so
5783 that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on the original
5784 authors' reputations.
5786 Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software
5787 patents. We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free
5788 program will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the
5789 program proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any
5790 patent must be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all.
5792 The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and
5793 modification follow.
5795 GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
5796 TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
5798 0. This License applies to any program or other work which contains
5799 a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed
5800 under the terms of this General Public License. The "Program", below,
5801 refers to any such program or work, and a "work based on the Program"
5802 means either the Program or any derivative work under copyright law:
5803 that is to say, a work containing the Program or a portion of it,
5804 either verbatim or with modifications and/or translated into another
5805 language. (Hereinafter, translation is included without limitation in
5806 the term "modification".) Each licensee is addressed as "you".
5808 Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not
5809 covered by this License; they are outside its scope. The act of
5810 running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program
5811 is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the
5812 Program (independent of having been made by running the Program).
5813 Whether that is true depends on what the Program does.
5815 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's
5816 source code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you
5817 conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate
5818 copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the
5819 notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty;
5820 and give any other recipients of the Program a copy of this License
5821 along with the Program.
5823 You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and
5824 you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee.
5826 2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion
5827 of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and
5828 distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1
5829 above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
5831 a) You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices
5832 stating that you changed the files and the date of any change.
5834 b) You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in
5835 whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any
5836 part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third
5837 parties under the terms of this License.
5839 c) If the modified program normally reads commands interactively
5840 when run, you must cause it, when started running for such
5841 interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an
5842 announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a
5843 notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide
5844 a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under
5845 these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this
5846 License. (Exception: if the Program itself is interactive but
5847 does not normally print such an announcement, your work based on
5848 the Program is not required to print an announcement.)
5850 These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If
5851 identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program,
5852 and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in
5853 themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those
5854 sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you
5855 distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based
5856 on the Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of
5857 this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the
5858 entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it.
5860 Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest
5861 your rights to work written entirely by you; rather, the intent is to
5862 exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or
5863 collective works based on the Program.
5865 In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program
5866 with the Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of
5867 a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other work under
5868 the scope of this License.
5870 3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it,
5871 under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of
5872 Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following:
5874 a) Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable
5875 source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Sections
5876 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
5878 b) Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three
5879 years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your
5880 cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete
5881 machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be
5882 distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium
5883 customarily used for software interchange; or,
5885 c) Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer
5886 to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is
5887 allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you
5888 received the program in object code or executable form with such
5889 an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.)
5891 The source code for a work means the preferred form of the work for
5892 making modifications to it. For an executable work, complete source
5893 code means all the source code for all modules it contains, plus any
5894 associated interface definition files, plus the scripts used to
5895 control compilation and installation of the executable. However, as a
5896 special exception, the source code distributed need not include
5897 anything that is normally distributed (in either source or binary
5898 form) with the major components (compiler, kernel, and so on) of the
5899 operating system on which the executable runs, unless that component
5900 itself accompanies the executable.
5902 If distribution of executable or object code is made by offering
5903 access to copy from a designated place, then offering equivalent
5904 access to copy the source code from the same place counts as
5905 distribution of the source code, even though third parties are not
5906 compelled to copy the source along with the object code.
5908 4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program
5909 except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt
5910 otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Program is
5911 void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License.
5912 However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under
5913 this License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such
5914 parties remain in full compliance.
5916 5. You are not required to accept this License, since you have not
5917 signed it. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or
5918 distribute the Program or its derivative works. These actions are
5919 prohibited by law if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by
5920 modifying or distributing the Program (or any work based on the
5921 Program), you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so, and
5922 all its terms and conditions for copying, distributing or modifying
5923 the Program or works based on it.
5925 6. Each time you redistribute the Program (or any work based on the
5926 Program), the recipient automatically receives a license from the
5927 original licensor to copy, distribute or modify the Program subject to
5928 these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further
5929 restrictions on the recipients' exercise of the rights granted herein.
5930 You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties to
5933 7. If, as a consequence of a court judgment or allegation of patent
5934 infringement or for any other reason (not limited to patent issues),
5935 conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or
5936 otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not
5937 excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot
5938 distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this
5939 License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you
5940 may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent
5941 license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by
5942 all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then
5943 the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to
5944 refrain entirely from distribution of the Program.
5946 If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under
5947 any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended to
5948 apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other
5951 It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any
5952 patents or other property right claims or to contest validity of any
5953 such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting the
5954 integrity of the free software distribution system, which is
5955 implemented by public license practices. Many people have made
5956 generous contributions to the wide range of software distributed
5957 through that system in reliance on consistent application of that
5958 system; it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or she is willing
5959 to distribute software through any other system and a licensee cannot
5962 This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to
5963 be a consequence of the rest of this License.
5965 8. If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in
5966 certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the
5967 original copyright holder who places the Program under this License
5968 may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding
5969 those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among
5970 countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates
5971 the limitation as if written in the body of this License.
5973 9. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions
5974 of the General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will
5975 be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to
5976 address new problems or concerns.
5978 Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program
5979 specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and "any
5980 later version", you have the option of following the terms and conditions
5981 either of that version or of any later version published by the Free
5982 Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of
5983 this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software
5986 10. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free
5987 programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author
5988 to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free
5989 Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes
5990 make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals
5991 of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and
5992 of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally.
5996 11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
5997 FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN
5998 OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
5999 PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED
6000 OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
6001 MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS
6002 TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE
6003 PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING,
6004 REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
6006 12. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
6007 WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
6008 REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES,
6009 INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING
6010 OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED
6011 TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY
6012 YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER
6013 PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE
6014 POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
6016 END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
6018 How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
6020 If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
6021 possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
6022 free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
6024 To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
6025 to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
6026 convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
6027 the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
6029 <one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
6030 Copyright (C) <year> <name of author>
6032 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
6033 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
6034 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
6035 (at your option) any later version.
6037 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
6038 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
6039 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
6040 GNU General Public License for more details.
6042 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
6043 with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
6044 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
6047 Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
6049 If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
6050 when it starts in an interactive mode:
6052 Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) year name of author
6053 Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
6054 This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
6055 under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
6057 The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
6058 parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may
6059 be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; they could even be
6060 mouse-clicks or menu items--whatever suits your program.
6062 You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
6063 school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if
6064 necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
6066 Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
6067 `Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
6069 <signature of Ty Coon>, 1 April 1989
6070 Ty Coon, President of Vice
6072 This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
6073 proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
6074 consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
6075 library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
6076 Public License instead of this License.
6081 License for Scintilla and SciTE
6082 ===============================
6084 Copyright 1998-2003 by Neil Hodgson <neilh(at)scintilla(dot)org>
6088 Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and
6089 its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted,
6090 provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and
6091 that both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in
6092 supporting documentation.
6094 NEIL HODGSON DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE,
6095 INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN
6096 NO EVENT SHALL NEIL HODGSON BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR
6097 CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS
6098 OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE
6099 OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
6100 USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.