.. |(version)| replace:: 2.1 .. -*- reStructuredText -*- ======= Geany ======= ------------------------- A fast, light, GTK+ IDE ------------------------- :Authors: Enrico Tröger, Nick Treleaven, Frank Lanitz, Colomban Wendling, Matthew Brush :Date: 2023-10-19 :Version: |(version)| Copyright © 2005 The Geany contributors This document is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. A copy of this license can be found in the file COPYING included with the source code of this program, and also in the chapter `GNU General Public License`_. .. contents:: Introduction ============ About Geany ----------- Geany is a small and lightweight Integrated Development Environment. It was developed to provide a small and fast IDE, which has only a few dependencies on other packages. Another goal was to be as independent as possible from a particular Desktop Environment like KDE or GNOME - Geany only requires the GTK+ runtime libraries. Some basic features of Geany: * Syntax highlighting * Code folding * Autocompletion of symbols/words * Construct completion/snippets * Auto-closing of XML and HTML tags * Calltips * Many supported filetypes including C, Java, PHP, HTML, Python, Perl, Pascal, and others * Symbol lists * Code navigation * Build system to compile and execute your code * Simple project management * Plugin interface Where to get it --------------- You can obtain Geany from https://www.geany.org/ or perhaps also from your distribution. For a list of available packages, please see https://www.geany.org/Download/ThirdPartyPackages. License ------- Geany is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. A copy of this license can be found in the file COPYING included with the source code of this program and in the chapter, `GNU General Public License`_. The included Scintilla library (found in the subdirectory ``scintilla/``) has its own license, which can be found in the chapter, `License for Scintilla and SciTE`_. About this document ------------------- This documentation is available in HTML and text formats. The latest version can always be found at https://www.geany.org/. If you want to contribute to it, see `Contributing to this document`_. Installation ============ Requirements ------------ You will need the GTK (>= 3.24) libraries and their dependencies (Pango, GLib and ATK). Your distro should provide packages for these, usually installed by default. For Windows, you can download an installer from the website which bundles these libraries. Binary packages --------------- There are many binary packages available. For an up-to-date but maybe incomplete list see https://www.geany.org/Download/ThirdPartyPackages. Source compilation ------------------ Compiling Geany is quite easy. To do so, you need the GTK (>= 3.24) libraries and header files. You also need the Pango, GLib and ATK libraries and header files. All these files are available at https://www.gtk.org, but very often your distro will provide development packages to save the trouble of building these yourself. Furthermore you need, of course, a C and C++ compiler. The GNU versions of these tools are recommended. Autotools based build system ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ To compile Geany yourself, you just need the Make tool, preferably GNU Make. Then run the following commands:: $ ./configure $ make Then as root:: % make install Or via sudo:: % sudo make install Custom installation ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The configure script supports several common options, for a detailed list, type:: $ ./configure --help You may also want to read the INSTALL file for advanced installation options. * See also `Compile-time options`_. Dynamic linking loader support and VTE ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ In the case that your system lacks dynamic linking loader support, you probably want to pass the option ``--disable-vte`` to the ``configure`` script. This prevents compiling Geany with dynamic linking loader support for automatically loading ``libvte.so.4`` if available. Build problems ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If there are any errors during compilation, check your build environment and try to find the error, otherwise contact the mailing list or one the authors. Sometimes you might need to ask for specific help from your distribution. Installation prefix ------------------- If you want to find Geany's system files after installation you may want to know the installation prefix. Pass the ``--print-prefix`` option to Geany to check this - see `Command line options`_. The first path is the prefix. On Unix-like systems this is commonly ``/usr`` if you installed from a binary package, or ``/usr/local`` if you build from source. .. note:: Editing system files is not necessary as you should use the per-user configuration files instead, which don't need root permissions. See `Configuration files`_. Usage ===== Getting started --------------- You can start Geany in the following ways: * From the Desktop Environment menu: Choose in your application menu of your used Desktop Environment: Development --> Geany. At Windows-systems you will find Geany after installation inside the application menu within its special folder. * From the command line: To start Geany from a command line, type the following and press Return:: % geany The Geany workspace ------------------- The Geany window is shown in the following figure: .. image:: ./images/main_window.png .. note:: Screenshots in this document are taken with the default GTK Adwaita theme, but Geany will adapt to the desktop GTK theme that is set. The workspace has the following parts: * The menu. * An optional toolbar. * An optional sidebar that can show the following tabs: * Documents - A `document list <#document-list-views>`_. * Symbols - A list of symbols in your code. * The main editor window. * An optional message window which can show the following tabs: * Status - A list of status messages. * Compiler - The output of compiling or building programs. * Messages - Results of `Find Usage`_, `Find in Files`_ and other actions * Scribble - A text scratchpad for any use. * Terminal - An optional `terminal window <#virtual-terminal-emulator-widget-vte>`_. * A status bar Most of these can be configured in the `Interface preferences`_, the `View menu`_, or the popup menu for the relevant area. Additional tabs may be added to the sidebar and message window by plugins. The position of the tabs can be selected in the interface preferences. The sizes of the sidebar and message window can be adjusted by dragging the dividers. Sidebar Usage ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The sidebar has a right click menu that can control what is visible and has actions specific to the tab (other tabs added by plugins are described by that plugin documentation): * Symbols * expand/collapse the tree * control sorting order * control whether to group symbols by their type * locate the symbol in documents The symbols tab can also be filtered by typing a string into the entry at the top of the tab. All symbols that contain the entered string as a substring will be shown in the tree. Multiple filters can be separated by a space. * Documents * expand/collapse the tree * save to or reload from files * search tree based at selected file * show or hide the document paths Command line options -------------------- ============ ======================= ================================================= Short option Long option Function ============ ======================= ================================================= *none* +number Set initial line number for the first opened file (same as --line, do not put a space between the + sign and the number). E.g. "geany +7 foo.bar" will open the file foo.bar and place the cursor in line 7. *none* --column Set initial column number for the first opened file. -c dir_name --config=directory_name Use an alternate configuration directory. The default configuration directory is ``~/.config/geany/`` and that is where ``geany.conf`` and other configuration files reside. *none* --ft-names Print a list of Geany's internal filetype names (useful for snippets configuration). -g --generate-tags Generate a global tags file (see `Generating a global tags file`_). -P --no-preprocessing Don't preprocess C/C++ files when generating tags file. -i --new-instance Do not open files in a running instance, force opening a new instance. Only available if Geany was compiled with support for Sockets. -l --line Set initial line number for the first opened file. *none* --list-documents Return a list of open documents in a running Geany instance. This can be used to read the currently opened documents in Geany from an external script or tool. The returned list is separated by newlines (LF) and consists of the full, UTF-8 encoded filenames of the documents. Only available if Geany was compiled with support for Sockets. -m --no-msgwin Do not show the message window. Use this option if you do not need compiler messages or VTE support. -n --no-ctags Do not load symbol completion and call tip data. Use this option if you do not want to use them. -p --no-plugins Do not load plugins or plugin support. *none* --print-prefix Print installation prefix, the data directory, the lib directory and the locale directory (in that order) to stdout, one line each. This is mainly intended for plugin authors to detect installation paths. -r --read-only Open all files given on the command line in read-only mode. This only applies to files opened explicitly from the command line, so files from previous sessions or project files are unaffected. -s --no-session Do not load the previous session's files. -t --no-terminal Do not load terminal support. Use this option if you do not want to load the virtual terminal emulator widget at startup. If you do not have ``libvte.so.4`` installed, then terminal-support is automatically disabled. Only available if Geany was compiled with support for VTE. *none* --socket-file Use this socket filename for communication with a running Geany instance. This can be used with the following command to execute Geany on the current workspace:: geany --socket-file=/tmp/geany-sock-$(xprop -root _NET_CURRENT_DESKTOP | awk '{print $3}') *none* --vte-lib Specify explicitly the path including filename or only the filename to the VTE library, e.g. ``/usr/lib/libvte.so`` or ``libvte.so``. This option is only needed when the auto-detection does not work. Only available if Geany was compiled with support for VTE. -v --verbose Be verbose (print useful status messages). -V --version Show version information and exit. -? --help Show help information and exit. *none* *files ...* Open all given filenames at startup. If a running instance is detected, pass filenames *file:line ...* to it instead. *file:line:col ...* Geany also recognizes line and column information when appended to the filename with colons, e.g. ``geany foo.bar:10:5`` will open the file ``foo.bar`` and place the cursor in line 10 at column 5. If a filename does not exist, create a new document with the desired filename if the *Open new files from the command-line* `file pref <#files-preferences>`_ is set. A project can also be opened, but the project filename (\*.geany) must be the first non-option argument. Any other project filenames will be opened as text files. ============ ======================= ================================================= Geany also supports all generic GTK options, a list is available on the help screen. General ------- Startup ^^^^^^^ At startup, Geany loads all files from the last time Geany was launched. You can disable this feature in the preferences dialog (see `General Startup preferences`_). You can start several instances of Geany, but only the first will load files from the last session. In the subsequent instances, you can find these files in the file menu under the *Recent files* item. By default this contains the last 10 recently opened files. You can change the number of recently opened files in the `Files tab <#files-preferences>`_ of the preferences dialog. To run a second instance of Geany, do not specify any filenames on the command-line, or disable opening files in a running instance using the ``-i`` `command line option <#command-line-options>`_. Opening files ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Open dialog ``````````` The *File->Open* command will show a dialog to choose one or more text files to open. There is a list of file filters on the right with the following items: * All files (default) * All source - a combination of all the patterns for each filetype (see `Filetype extensions`_) * Individual filetypes Clicking *More options* will reveal controls to open files with a specific filetype and/or encoding (see `Character sets and Unicode Byte-Order-Mark (BOM)`_). Opening files from the command-line in a running instance ````````````````````````````````````````````````````````` Geany detects if there is an instance of itself already running and opens files from the command-line in that instance. So, Geany can be used to view and edit files by opening them from other programs such as a file manager. You can also pass line number and column number information, e.g.:: geany some_file.foo:55:4 This would open the file ``some_file.foo`` with the cursor on line 55, column 4. If you do not like this for some reason, you can disable using the first instance by using the appropriate command line option -- see the section called `Command line options`_. Virtual terminal emulator widget (VTE) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If you have installed ``libvte.so`` on your system, it is loaded automatically by Geany, and you will have a terminal widget in the notebook at the bottom. If Geany cannot find any ``libvte.so`` at startup, the terminal widget will not be loaded. So there is no need to install the package containing this file in order to run Geany. Additionally, you can disable the use of the terminal widget by command line option, for more information see the section called `Command line options`_. You can use this terminal (from now on called VTE) much as you would a terminal program like xterm. There is basic clipboard support. You can paste the contents of the clipboard by pressing the right mouse button to open the popup menu, and choosing Paste. To copy text from the VTE, just select the desired text and then press the right mouse button and choose Copy from the popup menu. On systems running the X Window System you can paste the last selected text by pressing the middle mouse button in the VTE (on 2-button mice, the middle button can often be simulated by pressing both mouse buttons together). In the preferences dialog you can specify a shell which should be started in the VTE. To make the specified shell a login shell just use the appropriate command line options for the shell. These options should be found in the manual page of the shell. For zsh and bash you can use the argument ``--login``. .. note:: Geany tries to load ``libvte.so``. If this fails, it tries to load some other filenames. If this fails too, you should check whether you installed libvte correctly. Again note, Geany will run without this library. It could be, that the library is called something else than ``libvte.so`` (e.g. on FreeBSD 6.0 it is called ``libvte.so.8``). If so please set a link to the correct file (as root):: # ln -s /usr/lib/libvte.so.X /usr/lib/libvte.so Obviously, you have to adjust the paths and set X to the number of your ``libvte.so``. You can also specify the filename of the VTE library to use on the command line (see the section called `Command line options`_) or at compile time by specifying the command line option ``--with-vte-module-path`` to ./configure. Documents --------- Switching between documents ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The documents list and the editor tabs are two different ways to switch between documents using the mouse. When you hit the key combination to move between tabs, the order is determined by the tab order. It is not alphabetical as shown in the documents list (regardless of whether or not editor tabs are visible). See the `Notebook tab keybindings`_ section for useful shortcuts including for Most-Recently-Used document switching. Document list views ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ There are three different ways to display documents on the sidebar if *Show documents list* is active. To switch between views press the right mouse button on the documents list and select one of these items: Documents Only Show only file names of open documents in sorted order. .. image:: ./images/sidebar_documents_only.png Show Paths Show open documents as a two-level tree in which first level is the paths of directories containing open files and the second level is the file names of the documents open in that path. All documents with the same path are grouped together under the same first level item. Paths are in sorted order and documents are sorted within each group. .. image:: ./images/sidebar_show_paths.png Show Tree Show paths as above, but as a multiple level partial tree. The tree is only expanded at positions where two or more directory paths to open documents share the same prefix. The common prefix is shown as a parent level, and the remainder of those paths are shown as child levels. This applies recursively down the paths making a tree to the file names of open documents, which are grouped in sorted order as an additional level below the last path segment. For convenience two common file locations are handled specially, open files below the users home directory and open files below an open project base path. Each of these is moved to its own top level tree instead of being in place in the normal tree. The top level of these trees are each labelled differently. For the home directory tree the path of the home directory is shown as ``~``, and for the project tree the path to the project base path is shown simply as the project name. .. image:: ./images/sidebar_show_tree.png In all cases paths and file names that do not fit in the width available are ellipsised. Cloning documents ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The `Document->Clone` menu item copies the current document's text, cursor position and properties into a new untitled document. If there is a selection, only the selected text is copied. This can be useful when making temporary copies of text or for creating documents with similar or identical contents. Automatic filename insertion on `Save As...` ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If a document is saved via `Document->Save As...` then the filename is automatically inserted into the comment header replacing text like `untitled.ext` in the first 3 lines of the file. E.g. if a new ``.c`` file is created using `File->New (with Template)` then the text `untitled.c` in line 2 would be replaced with the choosen file name on `Save As...` (this example assumes the default file templates being used). Character sets and Unicode Byte-Order-Mark (BOM) ------------------------------------------------ Using character sets ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Geany provides support for detecting and converting character sets. So you can open and save files in different character sets, and even convert a file from one character set to another. To do this, Geany uses the character conversion capabilities of the GLib library. Only text files are supported, i.e. opening files which contain NULL-bytes may fail. Geany will try to open the file anyway but it is likely that the file will be truncated because it can only be read up to the first occurrence of a NULL-byte. All characters after this position are lost and are not written when you save the file. Geany tries to detect the encoding of a file while opening it, but auto-detecting the encoding of a file is not easy and sometimes an encoding might not be detected correctly. In this case you have to set the encoding of the file manually in order to display it correctly. You can this in the file open dialog by selecting an encoding in the drop down box or by reloading the file with the file menu item "Reload as". The auto-detection works well for most encodings but there are also some encodings where it is known that auto-detection has problems. There are different ways to set different encodings in Geany: * Using the file open dialog This opens the file with the encoding specified in the encoding drop down box. If the encoding is set to "Detect from file" auto-detection will be used. If the encoding is set to "Without encoding (None)" the file will be opened without any character conversion and Geany will not try to auto-detect the encoding (see below for more information). * Using the "Reload as" menu item This item reloads the current file with the specified encoding. It can help if you opened a file and found out that the wrong encoding was used. * Using the "Set encoding" menu item Contrary to the above two options, this will not change or reload the current file unless you save it. It is useful when you want to change the encoding of the file. * Specifying the encoding in the file itself As mentioned above, auto-detecting the encoding of a file may fail on some encodings. If you know that Geany doesn't open a certain file, you can add the specification line, described in the next section, to the beginning of the file to force Geany to use a specific encoding when opening the file. In-file encoding specification ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Geany detects meta tags of HTML files which contain charset information like:: and the specified charset is used when opening the file. This is useful if the encoding of the file cannot be detected properly. For non-HTML files you can also define a line like:: /* geany_encoding=ISO-8859-15 */ or:: # geany_encoding=ISO-8859-15 # to force an encoding to be used. The #, /\* and \*/ are examples of filetype-specific comment characters. It doesn't matter which characters are around the string " geany_encoding=ISO-8859-15 " as long as there is at least one whitespace character before and after this string. Whitespace characters are in this case a space or tab character. An example to use this could be you have a file with ISO-8859-15 encoding but Geany constantly detects the file encoding as ISO-8859-1. Then you simply add such a line to the file and Geany will open it correctly the next time. Since Geany 0.15 you can also use lines which match the regular expression used to find the encoding string: ``coding[\t ]*[:=][\t ]*([a-z0-9-]+)[\t ]*`` .. note:: These specifications must be in the first 512 bytes of the file. Anything after the first 512 bytes will not be recognized. Some examples are:: # encoding = ISO-8859-15 or:: # coding: ISO-8859-15 Special encoding "None" ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ There is a special encoding "None" which uses no encoding. It is useful when you know that Geany cannot auto-detect the encoding of a file and it is not displayed correctly. Especially when the file contains NULL-bytes this can be useful to skip auto detection and open the file properly at least until the occurrence of the first NULL-byte. Using this encoding opens the file as it is without any character conversion. Unicode Byte-Order-Mark (BOM) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Furthermore, Geany detects a Unicode Byte Order Mark (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte_Order_Mark for details). Of course, this feature is only available if the opened file is in a Unicode encoding. The Byte Order Mark helps to detect the encoding of a file, e.g. whether it is UTF-16LE or UTF-16BE and so on. On Unix-like systems using a Byte Order Mark could cause some problems for programs not expecting it, e.g. the compiler gcc stops with stray errors, PHP does not parse a script containing a BOM and script files starting with a she-bang maybe cannot be started. In the status bar you can easily see whether the file starts with a BOM or not. If you want to set a BOM for a file or if you want to remove it from a file, just use the document menu and toggle the checkbox. .. note:: If you are unsure what a BOM is or if you do not understand where to use it, then it is probably not important for you and you can safely ignore it. Editing ------- Folding ^^^^^^^ Geany provides basic code folding support. Folding means the ability to show and hide parts of the text in the current file. You can hide unimportant code sections and concentrate on the parts you are working on and later you can show hidden sections again. In the editor window there is a small grey margin on the left side with [+] and [-] symbols which show hidden parts and hide parts of the file respectively. By clicking on these icons you can simply show and hide sections which are marked by vertical lines within this margin. For many filetypes nested folding is supported, so there may be several fold points within other fold points. .. note:: You can customize the folding icon and line styles - see the filetypes.common `Folding Settings`_. If you don't like it or don't need it at all, you can simply disable folding support completely in the preferences dialog. The folding behaviour can be changed with the "Fold/Unfold all children of a fold point" option in the preference dialog. If activated, Geany will unfold all nested fold points below the current one if they are already folded (when clicking on a [+] symbol). When clicking on a [-] symbol, Geany will fold all nested fold points below the current one if they are unfolded. This option can be inverted by pressing the Shift key while clicking on a fold symbol. That means, if the "Fold/Unfold all children of a fold point" option is enabled, pressing Shift will disable it for this click and vice versa. Column mode editing (rectangular selections) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ There is basic support for column mode editing. To use it, create a rectangular selection by holding down the Control and Shift keys (or Alt and Shift on Windows) while selecting some text. Once a rectangular selection exists you can start editing the text within this selection and the modifications will be done for every line in the selection. It is also possible to create a zero-column selection - this is useful to insert text on multiple lines. Drag and drop of text ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If you drag selected text in the editor widget of Geany the text is moved to the position where the mouse pointer is when releasing the mouse button. Holding Control when releasing the mouse button will copy the text instead. This behaviour was changed in Geany 0.11 - before the selected text was copied to the new position. Indentation ^^^^^^^^^^^ Geany allows each document to indent either with a tab character, multiple spaces or a combination of both. The *Tabs* setting indents with one tab character per indent level, and displays tabs as the indent width. The *Spaces* setting indents with the number of spaces set in the indent width for each level. The *Tabs and Spaces* setting indents with spaces as above, then converts as many spaces as it can to tab characters at the rate of one tab for each multiple of the `Various preference` setting *indent_hard_tab_width* (default 8) and displays tabs as the *indent_hard_tab_width* value. The default indent settings are set in `Editor Indentation preferences`_ (see the link for more information). The default settings can be overridden per-document using the Document menu. They can also be overridden by projects - see `Project management`_. The indent mode for the current document is shown on the status bar as follows: TAB Indent with Tab characters. SP Indent with spaces. T/S Indent with tabs and spaces, depending on how much indentation is on a line. Applying new indentation settings ````````````````````````````````` After changing the default settings you may wish to apply the new settings to every document in the current session. To do this use the *Project->Apply Default Indentation* menu item. Detecting indent type ````````````````````` The *Detect from file* indentation preference can be used to scan each file as it's opened and set the indent type based on how many lines start with a tab vs. 2 or more spaces. Auto-indentation ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ When enabled, auto-indentation happens when pressing *Enter* in the Editor. It adds a certain amount of indentation to the new line so the user doesn't always have to indent each line manually. Geany has four types of auto-indentation: None Disables auto-indentation completely. Basic Adds the same amount of whitespace on a new line as on the previous line. For the *Tabs* and the *Spaces* indent types the indentation will use the same combination of characters as the previous line. The *Tabs and Spaces* indentation type converts as explained above. Current chars Does the same as *Basic* but also indents a new line after an opening brace '{', and de-indents when typing a closing brace '}'. For Python, a new line will be indented after typing ':' at the end of the previous line. Match braces Similar to *Current chars* but the closing brace will be aligned to match the indentation of the line with the opening brace. This requires the filetype to be one where Geany knows that the Scintilla lexer understands matching braces (C, C++, D, HTML, Pascal, Bash, Perl, TCL). There is also XML-tag auto-indentation. This is enabled when the mode is more than just Basic, and is also controlled by a filetype setting - see `xml_indent_tags`_. Bookmarks ^^^^^^^^^ Geany provides a handy bookmarking feature that lets you mark one or more lines in a document, and return the cursor to them using a key combination. To place a mark on a line, either left-mouse-click in the left margin of the editor window, or else use Ctrl-m. This will produce a small green plus symbol in the margin. You can have as many marks in a document as you like. Click again (or use Ctrl-m again) to remove the bookmark. To remove all the marks in a given document, use "Remove Markers" in the Document menu. To navigate down your document, jumping from one mark to the next, use Ctrl-. (control period). To go in the opposite direction on the page, use Ctrl-, (control comma). Using the bookmarking feature together with the commands to switch from one editor tab to another (Ctrl-PgUp/PgDn and Ctrl-Tab) provides a particularly fast way to navigate around multiple files. Code navigation history ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ To ease navigation in source files and especially between different files, Geany lets you jump between different navigation points. Currently, this works for the following: * `Go to symbol declaration`_ * `Go to symbol definition`_ * Symbol list items * Build errors * Message items When using one of these actions, Geany remembers your current position and jumps to the new one. If you decide to go back to your previous position in the file, just use "Navigate back a location". To get back to the new position again, just use "Navigate forward a location". This makes it easier to navigate in e.g. foreign code and between different files. Sending text through custom commands ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You can define several custom commands in Geany and send the current selection to one of these commands using the *Edit->Format->Send Selection to* menu or keybindings. The output of the command will be used to replace the current selection. This makes it possible to use text formatting tools with Geany in a general way. The selected text will be sent to the standard input of the executed command, so the command should be able to read from it and it should print all results to its standard output which will be read by Geany. To help finding errors in executing the command, the output of the program's standard error will be printed on Geany's standard output. If there is no selection, the whole current line is used instead. To add a custom command, use the *Send Selection to->Set Custom Commands* menu item. Click on *Add* to get a new item and type the command. You can also specify some command line options. Empty commands are not saved. Normal shell quoting is supported, so you can do things like: * ``sed 's/\./(dot)/g'`` The above example would normally be done with the `Replace all`_ function, but it can be handy to have common commands already set up. Note that the command is not run in a shell, so if you want to use shell features like pipes and command chains, you need to explicitly launch the shell and pass it your command: * ``sh -c 'sort | uniq'`` Context actions ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You can execute the context action command on the current word at the cursor position or the available selection. This word or selection can be used as an argument to the command. The context action is invoked by a menu entry in the popup menu of the editor and also a keyboard shortcut (see the section called `Keybindings`_). The command can be specified in the preferences dialog and also for each filetype (see "context_action_cmd" in the section called `Filetype configuration`_). When the context action is invoked, the filetype specific command is used if available, otherwise the command specified in the preferences dialog is executed. The current word or selection can be referred with the wildcard "%s" in the command, it will be replaced by the current word or selection before the command is executed. For example a context action can be used to open API documentation in a browser window, the command to open the PHP API documentation would be:: firefox "https://www.php.net/%s" when executing the command, the %s is substituted by the word near the cursor position or by the current selection. If the cursor is at the word "echo", a browser window will open(assumed your browser is called firefox) and it will open the address: https://www.php.net/echo. Autocompletion ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Geany can offer a list of possible completions for symbols defined in the tags files and for all words in open documents. The autocompletion list for symbols is presented when the first few characters of the symbol are typed (configurable, see `Editor Completions preferences`_, default 4) or when the *Complete word* keybinding is pressed (configurable, see `Editor keybindings`_, default Ctrl-Space). For some languages the autocompletion list is ordered by heuristics to attempt to show names that are more likely to be what the user wants close to the top of the list. When the defined keybinding is typed and the *Autocomplete all words in document* preference (in `Editor Completions preferences`_) is selected then the autocompletion list will show all matching words in the document, if there are no matching symbols. If you don't want to use autocompletion it can be dismissed until the next symbol by pressing Escape. The autocompletion list is updated as more characters are typed so that it only shows completions that start with the characters typed so far. If no symbols begin with the sequence, the autocompletion window is closed. The up and down arrows will move the selected item. The highlighted item on the autocompletion list can be chosen from the list by pressing Enter/Return. You can also double-click to select an item. The sequence will be completed to match the chosen item, and if the *Drop rest of word on completion* preference is set (in `Editor Completions preferences`_) then any characters after the cursor that match a symbol or word are deleted. Word part completion ```````````````````` By default, pressing Tab will complete the selected item by word part; useful e.g. for adding the prefix ``gtk_combo_box_entry_`` without typing it manually: * gtk_com * gtk_combo_ * gtk_combo_box_ * gtk_combo_box_entry_ * gtk_combo_box_entry_set_text_column The key combination can be changed from Tab - See `Editor keybindings`_. If you clear/change the key combination for word part completion, Tab will complete the whole word instead, like Enter. Scope autocompletion ```````````````````` E.g.:: struct { int i; char c; } foo; When you type ``foo.`` it will show an autocompletion list with 'i' and 'c' symbols. It only works for languages that set parent scope names for e.g. struct members. Most languages only parse global definitions and so scope autocompletion will not work for names declared in local scope (e.g. inside functions). A few languages parse both local and global symbols (e.g. C/C++ parsers) and for these parsers scope autocompletion works also for local variables. Calltips ^^^^^^^^ A handy tooltip is shown when typing ``(`` after a symbol name when the symbol has a parameter list. The tag parser for the filetype must support parsing parameter lists. Calltips can also be shown with a `keybinding <#editor-keybindings>`_. When there is more than one matching symbol, arrows are shown which can be clicked to cycle through the signatures. User-definable snippets ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Snippets are small strings or code constructs which can be replaced or completed to a more complex string. So you can save a lot of time when typing common strings and letting Geany do the work for you. To know what to complete or replace Geany reads a configuration file called ``snippets.conf`` at startup. Maybe you need to often type your name, so define a snippet like this:: [Default] myname=Enrico Tröger Every time you write ``myname`` in Geany, it will replace "myname" with "Enrico Tröger". The key to start autocompletion can be changed in the preferences dialog, by default it is TAB. The corresponding keybinding is called `Complete snippet`. **Paths** You can override the default snippets using the user ``snippets.conf`` file. Use the *Tools->Configuration Files->snippets.conf* menu item. See also `Configuration file paths`_. This adds the default settings to the user file if the file doesn't exist. Alternatively the file can be created manually, adding only the settings you want to change. All missing settings will be read from the system snippets file. **Snippet groups** The file ``snippets.conf`` contains sections defining snippets that are available for particular filetypes and in general. The two sections "Default" and "Special" apply to all filetypes. "Default" contains all snippets which are available for every filetype and "Special" contains snippets which can only be used in other snippets. So you can define often used parts of snippets and just use the special snippet as a placeholder (see the ``snippets.conf`` for details). You can define sections with the name of a filetype eg "C++". The snippets in that section are only available for use in files with that filetype. Snippets in filetype sections will hide snippets with the same name in the "Default" section when used in a file of that filetype. **Substitution sequences for snippets** To define snippets you can use several special character sequences which will be replaced when using the snippet: ================ ========================================================= \\n or %newline% Insert a new line (it will be replaced by the used EOL char(s): LF, CR/LF, or CR). \\t or %ws% Insert an indentation step, it will be replaced according to the current document's indent mode. \\s \\s to force whitespace at beginning or end of a value ('key= value' won't work, use 'key=\\svalue') %cursor% Place the cursor at this position after completion has been done. You can define multiple %cursor% wildcards and use the keybinding `Move cursor in snippet` to jump to the next defined cursor position in the completed snippet. %...% "..." means the name of a key in the "Special" section. If you have defined a key "brace_open" in the "Special" section you can use %brace_open% in any other snippet. ================ ========================================================= Snippet names must not contain spaces otherwise they won't work correctly. But beside that you can define almost any string as a snippet and use it later in Geany. It is not limited to existing constructs of certain programming languages(like ``if``, ``for``, ``switch``). Define whatever you need. **Template wildcards** Since Geany 0.15 you can also use most of the available templates wildcards listed in `Template wildcards`_. All wildcards which are listed as `available in snippets` can be used. For instance to improve the above example:: [Default] myname=My name is {developer} mysystem=My system: {command:uname -a} this will replace ``myname`` with "My name is " and the value of the template preference ``developer``. **Word characters** You can change the way Geany recognizes the word to complete, that is how the start and end of a word is recognised when the snippet completion is requested. The section "Special" may contain a key "wordchars" which lists all characters a string may contain to be recognized as a word for completion. Leave it commented to use default characters or define it to add or remove characters to fit your needs. Snippet keybindings ``````````````````` Normally you would type the snippet name and press Tab. However, you can define keybindings for snippets under the *Keybindings* group in ``snippets.conf``:: [Keybindings] for=7 block_cursor=8 .. note:: Snippet keybindings may be overridden by Geany's configurable keybindings. Inserting Unicode characters ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You can insert Unicode code points by hitting Ctrl-Shift-u, then still holding Ctrl-Shift, type some hex digits representing the code point for the character you want and hit Enter or Return (still holding Ctrl-Shift). If you release Ctrl-Shift before hitting Enter or Return (or any other character), the code insertion is completed, but the typed character is also entered. In the case of Enter/Return, it is a newline, as you might expect. In some earlier versions of Geany, you might need to first unbind Ctrl-Shift-u in the `keybinding preferences`_, then select *Tools->Reload Configuration* or restart Geany. Note that it works slightly differently from other GTK applications, in that you'll need to continue to hold down the Ctrl and Shift keys while typing the code point hex digits (and the Enter or Return to finish the code point). Inserting color values ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You can insert a color value by selecting *Tools->Color Chooser* from the menu. A dialog appears to select the wanted color. If the cursor is placed inside a *#RRGGBB* format color value then the dialog will show that color after opening. On clicking on *Apply* or *Select* the code for the chosen color will be inserted in the format *#RRGGBB*. If text is selected, then it will be replaced with the color code on the first click on *Apply* or *Select*. If no text is selected or on subsequent clicks the color code is inserted at the current cursor position. Search, replace and go to ------------------------- This section describes search-related commands from the Search menu and the editor window's popup menu: * Find * Find selection * Find usage * Find in files * Replace * Go to symbol definition * Go to symbol declaration * Go to line See also `Search`_ preferences. Toolbar entries ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ There are also two toolbar entries: * Search bar * Go to line entry There are keybindings to focus each of these - see `Focus keybindings`_. Pressing Escape will then focus the editor. Search bar `````````` The quickest way to find some text is to use the search bar entry in the toolbar. This performs a case-insensitive search in the current document whilst you type. Pressing Enter will search again, and pressing Shift-Enter will search backwards. Find ^^^^ The Find dialog is used for finding text in one or more open documents. .. image:: ./images/find_dialog.png Matching options ```````````````` The syntax for the *Use regular expressions* option is shown in `Regular expressions`_. .. note:: *Use escape sequences* is implied for regular expressions. The *Use multi-line matching* option enables multi-line regular expressions instead of single-line ones. See `Regular expressions`_ for more details on the differences between the two modes. The *Use escape sequences* option will transform any escaped characters into their UTF-8 equivalent. For example, \\t will be transformed into a tab character. Other recognized symbols are: \\\\, \\n, \\r, \\uXXXX (Unicode characters). Find all ```````` To find all matches, click on the Find All expander. This will reveal several options: * In Document * In Session * Mark Find All In Document will show a list of matching lines in the current document in the Messages tab of the Message Window. *Find All In Session* does the same for all open documents. Mark will highlight all matches in the current document with a colored box. These markers can be removed by selecting the Remove Markers command from the Document menu. Change font in search dialog text fields ```````````````````````````````````````` All search related dialogs use a Monospace font for the text input fields to increase the readability of input text. This is useful when you are typing input such as regular expressions with spaces, periods and commas which might be hard to read with a proportional font. If you want to change the font, you can do this easily by using the following custom CSS snippet, see `Customizing Geany's appearance using GTK+ CSS`_:: #GeanyDialogSearch GtkEntry /* GTK < 3.20 */, #GeanyDialogSearch entry /* GTK >= 3.20 */ { font: 8pt monospace; } Find selection ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The *Find Next/Previous Selection* commands perform a search for the current selected text. If nothing is selected, by default the current word is used instead. This can be customized by the *find_selection_type* preference - see `Various preferences`_. ===== ============================================= Value *find_selection_type* behaviour ===== ============================================= 0 Use the current word (default). 1 Try the X selection first, then current word. 2 Repeat last search. ===== ============================================= Find usage ^^^^^^^^^^ *Find Usage* searches all open files. It is similar to the *Find All In Session* option in the Find dialog. If there is a selection, then it is used as the search text; otherwise the current word is used. The current word is either taken from the word nearest the edit cursor, or the word underneath the popup menu click position when the popup menu is used. The search results are shown in the Messages tab of the Message Window. .. note:: You can also use Find Usage for symbol list items from the popup menu. Find in files ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ *Find in Files* is a more powerful version of *Find Usage* that searches all files in a certain directory using the Grep tool. The Grep tool must be correctly set in Preferences to the path of the system's Grep utility. GNU Grep is recommended (see note below). .. image:: ./images/find_in_files_dialog.png The *Search* field is initially set to the current word in the editor (depending on `Search`_ preferences). The *Files* setting allows to choose which files are included in the search, depending on the mode: All Search in all files; Project Use the current project's patterns, see `Project properties`_; Custom Use custom patterns. Both project and custom patterns use a glob-style syntax, each pattern separated by a space. To search all ``.c`` and ``.h`` files, use: ``*.c *.h``. Note that an empty pattern list searches in all files rather than none. The *Directory* field is initially set to the current document's directory, unless this field has already been edited and the current document has not changed. Otherwise, the current document's directory is prepended to the drop-down history. This can be disabled - see `Search`_ preferences. The *Encoding* field can be used to define the encoding of the files to be searched. The entered search text is converted to the chosen encoding and the search results are converted back to UTF-8. The *Extra options* field is used to pass any additional arguments to the grep tool. .. note:: The *Files* setting uses ``--include=`` when searching recursively, *Recurse in subfolders* uses ``-r``; both are GNU Grep options and may not work with other Grep implementations. Filtering out version control files ``````````````````````````````````` When using the *Recurse in subfolders* option with a directory that's under version control, you can set the *Extra options* field to filter out version control files. If you have GNU Grep >= 2.5.2 you can use the ``--exclude-dir`` argument to filter out CVS and hidden directories like ``.svn``. Example: ``--exclude-dir=.svn --exclude-dir=CVS`` If you have an older Grep, you can try using the ``--exclude`` flag to filter out filenames. SVN Example: ``--exclude=*.svn-base`` The --exclude argument only matches the file name part, not the path. Replace ^^^^^^^ The Replace dialog is used for replacing text in one or more open documents. .. image:: ./images/replace_dialog.png The Replace dialog has the same options for matching text as the Find dialog. See the section `Matching options`_. The *Use regular expressions* option allows regular expressions to be used in the search string and back references in the replacement text -- see the entry for '\\n' in `Regular expressions`_. Replace all ``````````` To replace several matches, click on the *Replace All* expander. This will reveal several options: * In Document * In Session * In Selection *Replace All In Document* will replace all matching text in the current document. *Replace All In Session* does the same for all open documents. *Replace All In Selection* will replace all matching text in the current selection of the current document. Go to symbol definition ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If the current word or selection is the name of a symbol definition (e.g. a function name) and the file containing the symbol definition is open, this command will switch to that file and go to the corresponding line number. The current word is either the word nearest the edit cursor, or the word underneath the popup menu click position when the popup menu is used. If there are more symbols with the same name to which the goto can be performed, a pop up is shown with a list of all the occurrences. After selecting a symbol from the list Geany jumps to the corresponding symbol location. Geany tries to suggest the nearest symbol (symbol from the current file, other open documents or current directory) as the best candidate for the goto and places this symbol at the beginning of the list typed in boldface. .. note:: If the corresponding symbol is on the current line, Geany will first look for a symbol declaration instead, as this is more useful. Likewise *Go to symbol declaration* will search for a symbol definition first in this case also. Go to symbol declaration ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Like *Go to symbol definition*, but for a forward declaration such as a C function prototype or ``extern`` declaration instead of a function body. Go to line ^^^^^^^^^^ Go to a particular line number in the current file. Regular expressions ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You can use regular expressions in the Find and Replace dialogs by selecting the *Use regular expressions* check box (see `Matching options`_). The syntax is Perl compatible. Basic syntax is described in the table below. For full details, see https://www.geany.org/manual/gtk/glib/glib-regex-syntax.html. By default regular expressions are matched on a line-by-line basis. If you are interested in multi-line regular expressions, matched against the whole buffer at once, see the section `Multi-line regular expressions`_ below. .. note:: 1. The *Use escape sequences* dialog option always applies for regular expressions. 2. Searching backwards with regular expressions is not supported. 3. The *Use multi-line matching* dialog option to select single or multi-line matching. **In a regular expression, the following characters are interpreted:** ======= ============================================================ . Matches any character. ( This marks the start of a region for tagging a match. ) This marks the end of a tagged region. \\n Where n is 1 through 9 refers to the first through ninth tagged region when searching or replacing. Searching for (Wiki)\\1 matches WikiWiki. If the search string was Fred([1-9])XXX and the replace string was Sam\\1YYY, when applied to Fred2XXX this would generate Sam2YYY. \\0 When replacing, the whole matching text. \\b This matches a word boundary. \\c A backslash followed by d, D, s, S, w or W, becomes a character class (both inside and outside sets []). * d: decimal digits * D: any char except decimal digits * s: whitespace (space, \\t \\n \\r \\f \\v) * S: any char except whitespace (see above) * w: alphanumeric & underscore * W: any char except alphanumeric & underscore \\x This allows you to use a character x that would otherwise have a special meaning. For example, \\[ would be interpreted as [ and not as the start of a character set. Use \\\\ for a literal backslash. [...] Matches one of the characters in the set. If the first character in the set is ^, it matches the characters NOT in the set, i.e. complements the set. A shorthand S-E (start dash end) is used to specify a set of characters S up to E, inclusive. The special characters ] and - have no special meaning if they appear first in the set. - can also be last in the set. To include both, put ] first: []A-Z-]. Examples:: []|-] matches these 3 chars []-|] matches from ] to | chars [a-z] any lowercase alpha [^]-] any char except - and ] [^A-Z] any char except uppercase alpha [a-zA-Z] any alpha ^ This matches the start of a line (unless used inside a set, see above). $ This matches the end of a line. \* This matches 0 or more times. For example, Sa*m matches Sm, Sam, Saam, Saaam and so on. \+ This matches 1 or more times. For example, Sa+m matches Sam, Saam, Saaam and so on. \? This matches 0 or 1 time(s). For example, Joh?n matches John, Jon. ======= ============================================================ .. note:: This table is adapted from Scintilla and SciTE documentation, distributed under the `License for Scintilla and SciTE`_. Multi-line regular expressions `````````````````````````````` .. note:: The *Use multi-line matching* dialog option enables multi-line regular expressions. Multi-line regular expressions work just like single-line ones but a match can span several lines. While the syntax is the same, a few practical differences applies: ======= ============================================================ . Matches any character but newlines. This behavior can be changed to also match newlines using the (?s) option, see https://www.geany.org/manual/gtk/glib/glib-regex-syntax.html#idp5671632 [^...] A negative range (see above) *will* match newlines if they are not explicitly listed in that negative range. For example, range [^a-z] will match newlines, while range [^a-z\\r\\n] won't. While this is the expected behavior, it can lead to tricky problems if one doesn't think about it when writing an expression. ======= ============================================================ View menu --------- The View menu allows various elements of the main window to be shown or hidden, and also provides various display-related editor options. Color schemes dialog ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The Color Schemes dialog is available under the *View->Change Color Scheme* menu item. It lists various color schemes for editor highlighting styles, including the default scheme first. Other items are available based on what color scheme files Geany found at startup. Color scheme files are read from the `Configuration file paths`_ under the ``colorschemes`` subdirectory. They should have the extension ``.conf``. The default color scheme is read from ``filetypes.common``. The `[named_styles] section`_ and `[named_colors] section`_ are the same as for ``filetypes.common``. The ``[theme_info]`` section can contain information about the theme. The ``name`` and ``description`` keys are read to set the menu item text and tooltip, respectively. These keys can have translations, e.g.:: key=Hello key[de]=Hallo key[fr_FR]=Bonjour Symbols and tags files ---------------------- Upon opening, files of supported filetypes are parsed to extract the symbol information (aka "workspace symbols"). You can also have Geany automatically load external files containing the symbol information (aka "global tags files") upon startup, or manually using *Tools --> Load Tags File*. Geany uses its own tags file format, similar to what ``ctags`` uses (but is incompatible with ctags). You use Geany to generate global tags files, as described below. Workspace symbols ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Each document is parsed for symbols whenever a file is loaded, saved or modified (see *Symbol list update frequency* preference in the `Editor Completions preferences`_). These are shown in the Symbol list in the Sidebar. These symbols are also used for autocompletion and calltips for all documents open in the current session that have the same filetype. The *Go to Symbol* commands can be used with all workspace symbols. See `Go to symbol definition`_. Global tags files ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Global tags files are used to provide symbols for autocompletion and calltips without having to open the source files containing these symbols. This is intended for library APIs, as the tags file only has to be updated when you upgrade the library. You can load a custom global tags file in two ways: * Using the *Load Tags File* command in the Tools menu. * By moving or symlinking tags files to the ``tags`` subdirectory of one of the `configuration file paths`_ before starting Geany. You can either download these files or generate your own. They have the format:: name.lang_ext.tags *lang_ext* is one of the extensions set for the filetype associated with the tags parser. See the section called `Filetype extensions`_ for more information. Default global tags files ````````````````````````` Some global tags files are distributed with Geany and will be loaded automatically when the corresponding filetype is first used. Currently this includes global tags files for these languages: * C * Pascal * PHP * HTML -- &symbol; completion, e.g. for ampersand, copyright, etc. * LaTeX * Python Global tags file format ``````````````````````` Global tags files can have three different formats: * CTags format * Pipe-separated format * Tagmanager format Tag files using the CTags format should be left unmodified in the form generated by the ctags command-line tool. For the pipe-separated or tagmanager format, the first line of global tag files should be a comment, introduced by ``#`` followed by a space and ``format=pipe`` or ``format=tagmanager``, respectively; these are case-sensitive. This helps Geany to read the file properly. If this line is missing, Geany tries to auto-detect the format used but this might fail. CTags format ************ This is the recommended tags file format, generated by the ctags command-line tool from the universal-ctags project (https://github.com/universal-ctags/ctags). This format is compatible with the format historically used by Vi. The format is described at https://ctags.sourceforge.net/FORMAT, but for the full list of existing extensions please refer to universal-ctags. However, note that Geany may actually only honor a subset of the existing extensions. Pipe-separated format ********************* The Pipe-separated format is easier to read and write. There is one symbol per line and different symbol attributes are separated by the pipe character (``|``). A line looks like:: basename|string|(string path [, string suffix])| | The first field is the symbol name (usually a function name). | The second field is the type of the return value. | The third field is the argument list for this symbol. | The fourth field is the description for this symbol but currently unused and should be left empty. Except for the first field (symbol name), all other field can be left empty but the pipe separator must appear for them. You can easily write your own global tags files using this format. Just save them in your tags directory, as described earlier in the section `Global tags files`_. Tagmanager format ***************** The Tagmanager format is a bit more complex and is used for files created by the ``geany -g`` command. There is one symbol per line. Different symbol attributes like the return value or the argument list are separated with different characters indicating the type of the following argument. Generating a global tags file ````````````````````````````` Generating tags files using ctags ********************************* This is currently the recommended way of generating tags files. Unlike the methods below which use the Geany binary for their generation, this method should produce tags files which are compatible across Geany releases, starting from Geany 2.0. Geany supports loading tag files generated using the ``ctags`` command-line tool from the universal-ctags project (https://github.com/universal-ctags/ctags). Even though Geany should work with any ctags file, it is recommended to use certain fields to give Geany some additional information. The recommended fields are ``EfiklsZSt``, so to generate symbols for all sources in the my_project directory one can use:: ctags -n --fields=EfiklsZSt -R -o my_project.c.tags my_project Additional options may be given to the ``ctags`` tool, for instance, to restrict the generated tags file to some languages only, use certain tag kinds, etc. Note that when the ``l`` field (specifying the programming language) is enabled, the language of all symbols is set based on the value of this field instead of the language specified in the extension of the tags file. You however still have to name the file according to the same rules regardless of whether the ``l`` field is used or not. Generating tags files using Geany ********************************* You can generate your own global tags files by parsing a list of source files. The command is:: geany -g [-P] * Tags File filename should be in the format described earlier -- see the section called `Global tags files`_. * File list is a list of filenames, each with a full path (unless you are generating C/C++ tags files and have set the CFLAGS environment variable appropriately). * ``-P`` or ``--no-preprocessing`` disables using the C pre-processor to process ``#include`` directives for C/C++ source files. Use this option if you want to specify each source file on the command-line instead of using a 'master' header file. Also can be useful if you don't want to specify the CFLAGS environment variable. Example for the wxD library for the D programming language:: geany -g wxd.d.tags /home/username/wxd/wx/*.d Generating C/C++ tags files using Geany *************************************** You may need to first setup the `C ignore.tags`_ file. For C/C++ tags files gcc is required by default, so that header files can be preprocessed to include any other headers they depend upon. If you do not want this, use the ``-P`` option described above. For preprocessing, the environment variable CFLAGS should be set with appropriate ``-I/path`` include paths. The following example works with the bash shell, generating a tags file for the GnomeUI library:: CFLAGS=`pkg-config --cflags libgnomeui-2.0` geany -g gnomeui.c.tags \ /usr/include/libgnomeui-2.0/gnome.h You can adapt this command to use CFLAGS and header files appropriate for whichever libraries you want. Generating tags files on Windows using Geany ******************************************** This works basically the same as on other platforms:: "c:\program files\geany\bin\geany" -g c:\mytags.php.tags c:\code\somefile.php C ignore.tags ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You can ignore certain symbols for C-based languages if they would lead to wrong parsing of the code. Use the *Tools->Configuration Files->ignore.tags* menu item to open the user ``ignore.tags`` file. See also `Configuration file paths`_. List all symbol names you want to ignore in this file, separated by spaces and/or newlines. Example:: G_GNUC_NULL_TERMINATED G_GNUC_PRINTF G_GNUC_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT BAR This will ignore the above macros and will correctly detect 'Foo' as a type instead of 'BAR' in the following code: ``struct Foo BAR { int i; };`` In addition, it is possible to specify macro definition similarly to the gcc '-D' option: = Defines a C preprocessor . This emulates the behavior of the corresponding gcc option. All types of macros are supported, including the ones with parameters and variable arguments. Stringification, token pasting and recursive macro expansion are also supported. For even more detailed information please read the manual page of Universal Ctags. Preferences ----------- You may adjust Geany's settings using the Edit --> Preferences dialog. Any changes you make there can be applied by hitting either the Apply or the OK button. These settings will persist between Geany sessions. Note that most settings here have descriptive popup bubble help -- just hover the mouse over the item in question to get help on it. You may also adjust some View settings (under the View menu) that persist between Geany sessions. The settings under the Document menu, however, are only for the current document and revert to defaults when restarting Geany. .. note:: In the paragraphs that follow, the text describing a dialog tab comes after the screenshot of that tab. General Startup preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_gen_startup.png Startup ``````` Load files from the last session On startup, load the same files you had open the last time you used Geany. Load virtual terminal support Load the library for running a terminal in the message window area. Enable plugin support Allow plugins to be used in Geany. Shutdown ```````` Save window position and geometry Save the current position and size of the main window so next time you open Geany it's in the same location. Confirm Exit Have a dialog pop up to confirm that you really want to quit Geany. Paths ````` Startup path Path to start in when opening or saving files. It must be an absolute path. Project files Path to start in when opening project files. Extra plugin path By default Geany looks in the system installation and the user configuration - see `Plugins`_. In addition the path entered here will be searched. Usually you do not need to set an additional path to search for plugins. It might be useful when Geany is installed on a multi-user machine and additional plugins are available in a common location for all users. Leave blank to not set an additional lookup path. General Miscellaneous preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_gen_misc.png Miscellaneous ````````````` Beep on errors when compilation has finished Have the computer make a beeping sound when compilation of your program has completed or any errors occurred. Switch status message list at new message Switch to the status message tab (in the notebook window at the bottom) once a new status message arrives. Suppress status messages in the status bar Remove all messages from the status bar. The messages are still displayed in the status messages window. .. tip:: Another option is to use the *Switch to Editor* keybinding - it reshows the document statistics on the status bar. See `Focus keybindings`_. Auto-focus widgets (focus follows mouse) Give the focus automatically to widgets below the mouse cursor. This works for the main editor widget, the scribble, the toolbar search field go to line fields and the VTE. Search `````` Always wrap search Always wrap search around the document when finding a match. Hide the Find dialog Hide the `Find`_ dialog after clicking Find Next/Previous. Use the current word under the cursor for Find dialogs Use current word under the cursor when opening the Find, Find in Files or Replace dialog and there is no selection. When this option is disabled, the search term last used in the appropriate Find dialog is used. Use the current file's directory for Find in Files When opening the Find in Files dialog, set the directory to search to the directory of the current active file. When this option is disabled, the directory of the last use of the Find in Files dialog is used. See `Find in Files`_ for details. Projects ```````` Use project-based session files Save your current session when closing projects. You will be able to resume different project sessions, automatically opening the files you had open previously. Store project file inside the project base directory When creating new projects, the default path for the project file contains the project base path. Without this option enabled, the default project file path is one level above the project base path. In either case, you can easily set the final project file path in the *New Project* dialog. This option provides the more common defaults automatically for convenience. Interface preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_interface_interface.png Sidebar ``````` Show sidebar Whether to show the sidebar at all. Show symbol list Show the list of functions, variables, and other information in the current document you are editing. Show documents list Show all the documents you have open currently. This can be used to change between documents (see `Switching between documents`_) and to perform some common operations such as saving, closing and reloading. Position Whether to place the sidebar on the left or right of the editor window. Message window `````````````` Position Whether to place the message window on the bottom or right of the editor window. Fonts ````` Editor Change the font used to display documents. Symbol list Change the font used for the Symbols sidebar tab. Message window Change the font used for the message window area. Miscellaneous ````````````` Show status bar Show the status bar at the bottom of the main window. It gives information about the file you are editing like the line and column you are on, whether any modifications were done, the file encoding, the filetype and other information. Interface Notebook tab preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_interface_notebook.png Editor tabs ``````````` Show editor tabs Show a notebook tab for all documents so you can switch between them using the mouse (instead of using the Documents window). Show close buttons Make each tab show a close button so you can easily close open documents. Placement of new file tabs Whether to create a document with its notebook tab to the left or right of all existing tabs. Next to current Whether to place file tabs next to the current tab rather than at the edges of the notebook. Double-clicking hides all additional widgets Whether to call the View->Toggle All Additional Widgets command when double-clicking on a notebook tab. Tab label length If filenames are long, set the number of characters that should be visible on each tab's label. Tab positions ````````````` Editor Set the positioning of the editor's notebook tabs to the right, left, top, or bottom of the editing window. Sidebar Set the positioning of the sidebar's notebook tabs to the right, left, top, or bottom of the sidebar window. Message window Set the positioning of the message window's notebook tabs to the right, left, top, or bottom of the message window. Interface Toolbar preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Affects the main toolbar underneath the menu bar. .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_interface_toolbar.png Toolbar ``````` Show Toolbar Whether to show the toolbar. Append Toolbar to the Menu Allows to append the toolbar to the main menu bar instead of placing it below. This is useful to save vertical space. Customize Toolbar See `Customizing the toolbar`_. Appearance `````````` Icon Style Select the toolbar icon style to use - either icons and text, just icons or just text. The choice System default uses whatever icon style is set by GTK. Icon size Select the size of the icons you see (large, small or very small). The choice System default uses whatever icon size is set by GTK. Editor Features preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_edit_features.png Features ```````` Line wrapping Show long lines wrapped around to new display lines. .. _smart_home_key: "Smart" home key Whether to move the cursor to the first non-whitespace character on the line when you hit the home key on your keyboard. Pressing it again will go to the very start of the line. Disable Drag and Drop Do not allow the dragging and dropping of selected text in documents. Code folding Allow groups of lines in a document to be collapsed for easier navigation/editing. Fold/Unfold all children of a fold point Whether to fold/unfold all child fold points when a parent line is folded. Use indicators to show compile errors Underline lines with compile errors using red squiggles to indicate them in the editor area. Newline strips trailing spaces Remove any whitespace at the end of the line when you hit the Enter/Return key. See also `Strip trailing spaces`_. Note auto indentation is calculated before stripping, so although this setting will clear a blank line, it will not set the next line indentation back to zero. Line breaking column The editor column number to insert a newline at when Line Breaking is enabled for the current document. Comment toggle marker A string which is added when toggling a line comment in a source file. It is used to mark the comment as toggled. Editor Indentation preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_edit_indentation.png Indentation group ````````````````` See `Indentation`_ for more information. Width The width of a single indent size in spaces. By default the indent size is equivalent to 4 spaces. Detect width from file Try to detect and set the indent width based on file content, when a file is opened. Type When Geany inserts indentation, whether to use: * Just Tabs * Just Spaces * Tabs and Spaces, depending on how much indentation is on a line The *Tabs and Spaces* indent type is also known as *Soft tab support* in some other editors. Detect type from file Try to detect and set the indent type based on file content, when a file is opened. Auto-indent mode The type of auto-indentation you wish to use after pressing Enter, if any. Basic Just add the indentation of the previous line. Current chars Add indentation based on the current filetype and any characters at the end of the line such as ``{``, ``}`` for C, ``:`` for Python. Match braces Like *Current chars* but for C-like languages, make a closing ``}`` brace line up with the matching opening brace. Tab key indents If set, pressing tab will indent the current line or selection, and unindent when pressing Shift-tab. Otherwise, the tab key will insert a tab character into the document (which can be different from indentation, depending on the indent type). .. note:: There are also separate configurable keybindings for indent & unindent, but this preference allows the tab key to have different meanings in different contexts - e.g. for snippet completion. Backspace key unindents If set, pressing backspace while the cursor is in leading whitespace will reduce the indentation level, unless the indentation mode is tabs. Otherwise, the backspace key will delete the character before the cursor. Editor Completions preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_edit_completions.png Completions ``````````` Snippet Completion Whether to replace special keywords after typing Tab into a pre-defined text snippet. See `User-definable snippets`_. XML/HTML tag auto-closing When you open an XML/HTML tag automatically generate its completion tag. Automatic continuation multi-line comments Continue automatically multi-line comments in languages like C, C++ and Java when a new line is entered inside such a comment. With this option enabled, Geany will insert a ``*`` on every new line inside a multi-line comment, for example when you press return in the following C code:: /* * This is a C multi-line comment, press then Geany would insert:: * on the next line with the correct indentation based on the previous line, as long as the multi-line is not closed by ``*/``. If the previous line has no ``*`` prefix, no ``*`` will be added to the new line. Autocomplete symbols When you start to type a symbol name, look for the full string to allow it to be completed for you. Autocomplete all words in document When you start to type a word, Geany will search the whole document for words starting with the typed part to complete it, assuming there are no symbol names to show. Drop rest of word on completion Remove any word part to the right of the cursor when choosing a completion list item. Characters to type for autocompletion Number of characters of a word to type before autocompletion is displayed. Completion list height The number of rows to display for the autocompletion window. Max. symbol name suggestions The maximum number of items in the autocompletion list. Symbol list update frequency The minimum delay (in milliseconds) between two symbol list updates. This option determines how frequently the symbol list is updated for the current document. The smaller the delay, the more up-to-date the symbol list (and then the completions); but rebuilding the symbol list has a cost in performance, especially with large files. The default value is 250ms, which means the symbol list will be updated at most four times per second, even if the document changes continuously. A value of 0 disables automatic updates, so the symbol list will only be updated upon document saving. Auto-close quotes and brackets `````````````````````````````` Geany can automatically insert a closing bracket and quote characters when you open them. For instance, you type a ``(`` and Geany will automatically insert ``)``. With the following options, you can define for which characters this should work. Parenthesis ( ) Auto-close parenthesis when typing an opening one Curly brackets { } Auto-close curly brackets (braces) when typing an opening one Square brackets [ ] Auto-close square brackets when typing an opening one Single quotes ' ' Auto-close single quotes when typing an opening one Double quotes " " Auto-close double quotes when typing an opening one Editor Display preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This is for visual elements displayed in the editor window. .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_edit_display.png Display ``````` Invert syntax highlighting colors Invert all colors, by default this makes white text on a black background. Show indendation guides Show vertical lines to help show how much leading indentation there is on each line. Show whitespaces Mark all tabs with an arrow "-->" symbol and spaces with dots to show which kinds of whitespace are used. Show line endings Display a symbol everywhere that a carriage return or line feed is present. Show only non-default line endings Shows line ending characters only when they differ from the file default line ending character. Show line numbers Show or hide the Line Number margin. Show markers margin Show or hide the small margin right of the line numbers, which is used to mark lines. Stop scrolling at last line When enabled Geany stops scrolling when at the last line of the document. Otherwise you can scroll one more page even if there are no real lines. Lines visible around the cursor The number of lines to maintain between the cursor and the top and bottom edges of the view. This allows some lines of context around the cursor to always be visible. If *Stop scrolling at last line* is disabled, the cursor will never reach the bottom edge when this value is greater than 0. Long line marker ```````````````` The long line marker helps to indicate overly-long lines, or as a hint to the user for when to break the line. Type Line Show a thin vertical line in the editor window at the given column position. Background Change the background color of characters after the given column position to the color set below. (This is recommended over the *Line* setting if you use proportional fonts). Disabled Don't mark long lines at all. Long line marker Set this value to a value greater than zero to specify the column where it should appear. Long line marker color Set the color of the long line marker. Virtual spaces `````````````` Virtual space is space beyond the end of each line. The cursor may be moved into virtual space but no real space will be added to the document until there is some text typed or some other text insertion command is used. Disabled Do not show virtual spaces Only for rectangular selections Only show virtual spaces beyond the end of lines when drawing a rectangular selection Always Always show virtual spaces beyond the end of lines Change History `````````````` The *change history* feature enables changed text in a document to be shown in the markers margin or by underlining the text. By default, the *change history* feature is disabled. Newly added, modified and removed lines or words are highlighted to easily track changes to the opened document. The changes can be shown as vertical bars in the markers margin and/or as underlines in the text directly. .. note:: This feature may use a moderate amount of memory, especially if there are many or big changes in the document. Also, modification information is not kept when re-opening a document - all change markers will be lost. .. image:: ./images/edit_change_history.png The image shows the default visuals: * inserted characters appear with coloured underlines * points where characters were deleted are shown with small triangles * the margin shows a block indicating the overall state of the line, prioritizing the more consequential modified states * the states are modified (orange), saved (green), saved then reverted to modified (green-yellow), and saved then reverted to original (cyan). Show in markers margin Changes are shown in the markers margin as vertical bars Show as underline indicators Changes are shown as underlines in the text directly Files preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_files.png New files ````````` Open new documents from the command-line Whether to create new documents when passing filenames that don't exist from the command-line. Default encoding (new files) The type of file encoding you wish to use when creating files. Used fixed encoding when opening files Assume all files you are opening are using the type of encoding specified below. Default encoding (existing files) Opens all files with the specified encoding instead of auto-detecting it. Use this option when it's not possible for Geany to detect the exact encoding. Default end of line characters The end of line characters to which should be used for new files. On Windows systems, you generally want to use CR/LF which are the common characters to mark line breaks. On Unix-like systems, LF is default and CR is used on MAC systems. Saving files ```````````` Perform formatting operations when a document is saved. These can each be undone with the Undo command. Ensure newline at file end Add a newline at the end of the document if one is missing. Ensure consistent line endings Ensures that newline characters always get converted before saving, avoiding mixed line endings in the same file. .. _Strip trailing spaces: Strip trailing spaces Remove any whitespace at the end of each document line. .. note:: This does not apply to Diff documents, e.g. patch files. Replace tabs with spaces Replace all tabs in the document with the equivalent number of spaces. .. note:: It is better to use spaces to indent than use this preference - see `Indentation`_. Miscellaneous ````````````` Recent files list length The number of files to remember in the recently used files list. Disk check timeout The number of seconds to periodically check the current document's file on disk in case it has changed. Setting it to 0 will disable this feature. .. note:: These checks are only performed on local files. Remote files are not checked for changes due to performance issues (remote files are files in ``~/.gvfs/``). Tools preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_tools.png Tool paths `````````` Terminal The command to execute a script in a terminal. Occurrences of %c in the command are substituted with the run script name, see `Terminal emulators`_. Browser The location of your web browser executable. Grep The location of the grep executable. .. note:: For Windows users: at the time of writing it is recommended to use the grep.exe from the UnxUtils project (https://sourceforge.net/projects/unxutils). The grep.exe from the Mingw project for instance might not work with Geany at the moment. Commands ```````` Context action Set this to a command to execute on the current word. You can use the "%s" wildcard to pass the current word below the cursor to the specified command. Template preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ See `Templates`_. This data is used as meta data for various template text to insert into a document, such as the file header. You only need to set fields that you want to use in your template files. .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_templ.png Template data ````````````` See `Template meta data`_. Developer The name of the developer who will be creating files. Initials The initials of the developer. Mail address The email address of the developer. .. note:: You may wish to add anti-spam markup, e.g. ``namesiteext``. Company The company the developer is working for. Initial version The initial version of files you will be creating. Year Specify a format for the ``{year}`` wildcard. Date Specify a format for the ``{date}`` wildcard. Date & Time Specify a format for the ``{datetime}`` wildcard. See `Date & time wildcards`_ for more information. Keybinding preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_keys.png There are some commands listed in the keybinding dialog that are not, by default, bound to a key combination, and may not be available as a menu item. .. note:: For more information see the section `Keybindings`_. Printing preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_printing.png Use external command for printing Use a system command to print your file out. Use native GTK printing Let the GTK GUI toolkit handle your print request. Print line numbers Print the line numbers on the left of your paper. Print page number Print the page number on the bottom right of your paper. Print page header Print a header on every page that is sent to the printer. Use base name of the printed file Don't use the entire path for the header, only the filename. Date format How the date should be printed. For a list of available conversion specifiers see https://docs.gtk.org/glib/method.DateTime.format.html. Various preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_various.png Rarely used preferences, explained in the table below. A few of them require restart to take effect, and a few other will only affect newly opened or created documents before restart. ================================ =========================================== ========== =========== Key Description Default Applies ================================ =========================================== ========== =========== **``editor`` group** use_gtk_word_boundaries Whether to look for the end of a word true to new when using word-boundary related documents Scintilla commands (see `Scintilla keyboard commands`_). brace_match_ltgt Whether to highlight <, > angle brackets. false immediately complete_snippets_whilst_editing Whether to allow completion of snippets false immediately when editing an existing line (i.e. there is some text after the current cursor position on the line). Only used when the keybinding `Complete snippet` is set to ``Space``. show_editor_scrollbars Whether to display scrollbars. If set to true immediately false, the horizontal and vertical scrollbars are hidden completely. indent_hard_tab_width The size of a tab character. Don't change 8 immediately it unless you really need to; use the indentation settings instead. editor_ime_interaction Input method editor (IME)'s candidate 0 to new window behaviour. May be 0 (windowed) or documents 1 (inline) **``interface`` group** show_symbol_list_expanders Whether to show or hide the small true to new expander icons on the symbol list documents treeview. compiler_tab_autoscroll Whether to automatically scroll to the true immediately last line of the output in the Compiler tab. statusbar_template The status bar statistics line format. See below. immediately (See `Statusbar Templates`_ for details). new_document_after_close Whether to open a new document after all false immediately documents have been closed. msgwin_status_visible Whether to show the Status tab in the true immediately Messages Window msgwin_compiler_visible Whether to show the Compiler tab in the true immediately Messages Window msgwin_messages_visible Whether to show the Messages tab in the true immediately Messages Window msgwin_scribble_visible Whether to show the Scribble tab in the true immediately Messages Window warn_on_project_close Whether to show a warning when opening true immediately a project while one is already open. **``terminal`` group** send_selection_unsafe By default, Geany strips any trailing false immediately newline characters from the current selection before sending it to the terminal to not execute arbitrary code. This is mainly a security feature. If, for whatever reasons, you really want it to be executed directly, set this option to true. send_cmd_prefix String with which prefix the commands sent Empty immediately to the shell. This may be used to tell some shells (BASH with ``HISTCONTROL`` set to ``ignorespace``, ZSH with ``HIST_IGNORE_SPACE`` enabled, etc.) from putting these commands in their history by setting this to a space. Note that leading spaces must be escaped using `\s` in the configuration file. **``files`` group** allow_always_save Whether files can be saved always, even false immediately if they don't have any changes. By default, the Save button and menu item are disabled when a file is unchanged. When setting this option to true, the Save button and menu item are always active and files can be saved. use_atomic_file_saving Defines the mode how Geany saves files to false immediately disk. If disabled, Geany directly writes the content of the document to disk. This might cause loss of data when there is no more free space on disk to save the file. When set to true, Geany first saves the contents into a temporary file and if this succeeded, the temporary file is moved to the real file to save. This gives better error checking in case of no more free disk space. But it also destroys hard links of the original file and its permissions (e.g. executable flags are reset). Use this with care as it can break things seriously. The better approach would be to ensure your disk won't run out of free space. use_gio_unsafe_file_saving Whether to use GIO as the unsafe file true immediately saving backend. It is better on most situations but is known not to work correctly on some complex setups. gio_unsafe_save_backup Make a backup when using GIO unsafe file false immediately saving. Backup is named `filename~`. keep_edit_history_on_reload Whether to maintain the edit history when true immediately reloading a file, and allow the operation to be reverted. reload_clean_doc_on_file_change Whether to automatically reload documents false immediately that have no changes but which have changed on disk. If unsaved changes exist then the user is prompted to reload manually. save_config_on_file_change Automatically save Geany's configuration true immediately to disk once the document list changes (i.e. new documents are opened, saved or closed). This helps to prevent accidentally losing the session file list or other changed settings when Geany is not shut down cleanly. Disable this option if your configuration directory is on a slow drive, network share or similar and you experience problems. extract_filetype_regex Regex to extract filetype name from file See link immediately via capture group one. See `ft_regex`_ for default. **``search`` group** find_selection_type See `Find selection`_. 0 immediately replace_and_find_by_default Set ``Replace & Find`` button as default so true immediately it will be activated when the Enter key is pressed while one of the text fields has focus. **``build`` group** number_ft_menu_items The maximum number of menu items in the 2 on restart filetype build section of the Build menu. number_non_ft_menu_items The maximum number of menu items in the 3 on restart independent build section. number_exec_menu_items The maximum number of menu items in the 2 on restart execute section of the Build menu. **``socket`` group** socket_remote_cmd_port TCP port number to be used for inter 2 on restart process communication (i.e. with other Geany instances, e.g. "Open with Geany"). Only available on Windows, valid port range: 1024 to 65535. ================================ =========================================== ========== =========== Statusbar Templates ``````````````````` The default statusbar template is (note ``\t`` = tab): ``line: %l / %L\t col: %c\t sel: %s\t %w %t %mEOL: %M encoding: %e filetype: %f scope: %S`` Settings the preference to an empty string will also cause Geany to use this internal default. The following format characters are available for the statusbar template: ============ =========================================================== Placeholder Description ============ =========================================================== ``%l`` The current line number starting at 1 ``%L`` The total number of lines ``%c`` The current column number starting at 0, including virtual space. ``%C`` The current column number starting at 1, including virtual space. ``%s`` The number of selected characters or if only whole lines selected, the number of selected lines. ``%n`` The number of selected characters, even if only whole lines are selected. ``%w`` Shows ``RO`` when the document is in read-only mode, otherwise shows whether the editor is in overtype (OVR) or insert (INS) mode. ``%t`` Shows the indentation mode, either tabs (TAB), spaces (SP) or both (T/S). ``%m`` Shows whether the document is modified (MOD) or nothing. ``%M`` The name of the document's line-endings (ex. ``Unix (LF)``) ``%e`` The name of the document's encoding (ex. UTF-8). ``%f`` The filetype of the document (ex. None, Python, C, etc). ``%S`` The name of the scope where the caret is located. ``%p`` The caret position in the entire document starting at 0. ``%r`` Shows whether the document is read-only (RO) or nothing. ``%Y`` The Scintilla style number at the caret position. This is useful if you're debugging color schemes or related code. ============ =========================================================== Terminal (VTE) preferences ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ See also: `Virtual terminal emulator widget (VTE)`_. .. image:: ./images/pref_dialog_vte.png Terminal widget ``````````````` Terminal font Select the font that will be used in the terminal emulation control. Foreground color Select the font color. Background color Select the background color of the terminal. Background image Select the background image to show behind the terminal's text. Scrollback lines The number of lines buffered so that you can scroll though the history. Shell The location of the shell on your system. Scroll on keystroke Scroll the terminal to the prompt line when pressing a key. Scroll on output Scroll the output down. Cursor blinks Let the terminal cursor blink. Override Geany keybindings Allow the VTE to receive keyboard shortcuts (apart from focus commands). Disable menu shortcut key (F10 by default) Disable the menu shortcut when you are in the virtual terminal. Follow path of the current file Make the path of the terminal change according to the path of the current file. Execute programs in VTE Execute programs in the virtual terminal instead of using the external terminal tool. Note that if you run multiple execute commands at once the output may become mixed together in the VTE. Don't use run script Don't use the simple run script which is usually used to display the exit status of the executed program. This can be useful if you already have a program running in the VTE like a Python console (e.g. ipython). Use this with care. Project management ------------------ Project management is optional in Geany. Currently it can be used for: * Storing and opening session files on a project basis. * Overriding default settings with project equivalents. * Configuring the Build menu on a project basis. A list of session files can be stored and opened with the project when the *Use project-based session files* preference is enabled, in the `Projects`_ group of the `General Miscellaneous preferences`_ tab of the `Preferences`_ dialog. As long as a project is open, the Build menu will use the items defined in project's settings, instead of the defaults. See `Build Menu Configuration`_ for information on configuring the menu. The current project's settings are saved when it is closed, or when Geany is shutdown. When restarting Geany, the previously opened project file that was in use at the end of the last session will be reopened. The project menu items are detailed below. New project ^^^^^^^^^^^ There are two ways of creating new projects, either by using *Project->New* menu item or by using *Project->New from Folder* menu item. New This method is more suitable for creating new, empty projects from scratch at the default location without having any existing sources. To create a new project, fill in the *Name* field. By default this will setup a new project file ``~/projects/name/name.geany``. The *Base path* text field is setup to use ``~/projects/name``. This can safely be set to any existing path -- it will not touch the file structure contained in it. New from Folder This method is more suitable when there is already some folder containing source files for which you want to create a new project. When using this method, Geany first opens a directory selection dialog to select the folder containing the sources, and the *Base path* field is set to that value. Afterwards, Geany shows the same dialog as the *Project->New* method but already pre-filled with the values based on the *Base path* selection. The *Name* field is filled with the folder name, the *Filename* field is filled with ``base_path/name.geany`` and the *Base path* field is filled with the path specified in the previous dialog. Project properties ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You can set an optional description for the project. Currently it's only used for the ``{description}}`` template wildcard - see `Dynamic wildcards`_. The *Base path* field is used as the directory to run the Build menu commands. The specified path can be an absolute path or it is considered to be relative to the project's file name. The *File patterns* field allows to specify a list of file patterns for the project, which can be used in the `Find in files`_ dialog. The *Indentation* tab allows you to override the default `Indentation`_ settings. Open project ^^^^^^^^^^^^ The Open command displays a standard file chooser, starting in ``~/projects``. Choose a project file named with the ``.geany`` extension. When project session support is enabled, Geany will close the currently open files and open the session files associated with the project. Close project ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Project file settings are saved when the project is closed. When project session support is enabled, Geany will close the project session files and open any previously closed default session files. Build menu ---------- After editing code with Geany, the next step is to compile, link, build, interpret, run etc. As Geany supports many languages each with a different approach to such operations, and as there are also many language independent software building systems, Geany does not have a built-in build system, nor does it limit which system you can use. Instead the build menu provides a configurable and flexible means of running any external commands to execute your preferred build system. This section provides a description of the default configuration of the build menu and then covers how to configure it, and where the defaults fit in. Running the commands from within Geany has two benefits: * The current file is automatically saved before the command is run. * The output is captured in the Compiler notebook tab and parsed for warnings or errors. Warnings and errors that can be parsed for line numbers will be shown in red in the Compiler tab and you can click on them to switch to the relevant source file (or open it) and mark the line number. Also lines with warnings or errors are marked in the source, see `Indicators`_ below. .. tip:: If Geany's default error message parsing does not parse errors for the tool you're using, you can set a custom regex in the `Set Build Commands dialog`_, see `Build Menu Configuration`_. Indicators ^^^^^^^^^^ Indicators are red squiggly underlines which are used to highlight errors which occurred while compiling the current file. So you can easily see where your code failed to compile. You can remove them by selecting *Remove Error Indicators* in the Document menu. If you do not like this feature, you can disable it - see `Editor Features preferences`_. Default build menu items ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Depending on the current file's filetype, the default Build menu will contain the following items: * Compile * Build * Lint * Make All * Make Custom Target * Make Object * Next Error * Previous Error * Execute * Set Build Menu Commands Compile ``````` The Compile command has different uses for different kinds of files. For compilable languages such as C and C++, the Compile command is set up to compile the current source file into a binary object file. Java source files will be compiled to class file bytecode. Interpreted languages such as Perl, Python, Ruby will compile to bytecode if the language supports it, or will run a syntax check, or if that is not available will run the file in its language interpreter. Build ````` For compilable languages such as C and C++, the Build command will link the current source file's equivalent object file into an executable. If the object file does not exist, the source will be compiled and linked in one step, producing just the executable binary. Interpreted languages do not use the Build command. .. note:: If you need complex settings for your build system, or several different settings, then writing a Makefile and using the Make commands is recommended; this will also make it easier for users to build your software. Lint ```` Source code linters are often used to find code that doesn't correspond to certain style guidelines: non-portable code, common or hard to find errors, code "smells", variables used before being set, unused functions, division by zero, constant conditions, etc. Linters inspect the code and issue warnings much like the compilers do. This is formally referred to as static code analysis. Some common linters are pre-configured for you in the Build menu (``pycodestyle`` for Python, ``cppcheck`` for C/C++, JSHint for JavaScript, ``xmllint`` for XML, ``hlint`` for Haskell, ``shellcheck`` for shell code, ...), but all these are standalone tools you need to obtain before using. Make ```` This runs "make" in the same directory as the current file. Make custom target `````````````````` This is similar to running 'Make' but you will be prompted for the make target name to be passed to the Make tool. For example, typing 'clean' in the dialog prompt will run "make clean". Make object ``````````` Make object will run "make current_file.o" in the same directory as the current file, using the filename for 'current_file'. It is useful for building just the current file without building the whole project. Next error `````````` The next error item will move to the next detected error in the file. Previous error `````````````` The previous error item will move to the previous detected error in the file. Execute ``````` Execute will run the corresponding executable file, shell script or interpreted script in a terminal window. The command set in the `Set Build Commands dialog`_ is run in a script to ensure the terminal stays open after execution completes. Note: see `Terminal emulators`_ below for the command format. Alternatively the built-in VTE can be used if it is available - see `Virtual terminal emulator widget (VTE)`_. After your program or script has finished executing, the run script will prompt you to press the return key. This allows you to review any text output from the program before the terminal window is closed. .. note:: The execute command output is not parsed for errors. Stopping running processes `````````````````````````` When there is a running program, the Execute menu item in the menu and the Run button in the toolbar each become a stop button so you can stop the current running program (and any child processes). This works by sending the SIGQUIT signal to the process. Depending on the process you started it is possible that the process cannot be stopped. For example this can happen when the process creates more than one child process. Terminal emulators ****************** The Terminal field of the tools preferences tab requires a command to execute the terminal program and to pass it the name of the Geany run script that it should execute in a Bourne compatible shell (eg /bin/sh). The marker "%c" is substituted with the name of the Geany run script, which is created in the temporary directory and which changes the working directory to the directory set in the `Set Build Commands dialog`_. As an example the default (Linux) command is:: xterm -e "/bin/sh %c" Set build commands `````````````````` By default Compile, Build and Execute are fairly basic commands. You may wish to customise them using *Set Build Commands*. E.g. for C you can add any include paths and compile flags for the compiler, any library names and paths for the linker, and any arguments you want to use when running Execute. Build menu configuration ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The build menu has considerable flexibility and configurability, allowing menu labels, the commands they execute and the directory they execute in to be configured. For example, if you change one of the default make commands to run say 'waf' you can also change the label to match. These settings are saved automatically when Geany is shut down. The build menu is divided into four groups of items each with different behaviors: * Filetype build commands - are configurable and depend on the filetype of the current document; they capture output in the compiler tab and parse it for errors. * Independent build commands - are configurable and mostly don't depend on the filetype of the current document; they also capture output in the compiler tab and parse it for errors. * Execute commands - are configurable and intended for executing your program or other long running programs. The output is not parsed for errors and is directed to the terminal command selected in `Tools preferences`_. * Fixed commands - these perform built-in actions: * Go to the next error. * Go to the previous error. * Show the build menu commands dialog. The maximum numbers of items in each of the configurable groups can be configured in `Various preferences`_. Even though the maximum number of items may have been increased, only those menu items that have commands configured are shown in the menu. The groups of menu items obtain their configuration from four potential sources. The highest priority source that has the menu item defined will be used. The sources in decreasing priority are: * A project file if open * The user preferences * The system filetype definitions * The defaults The detailed relationships between sources and the configurable menu item groups is shown in the following table: +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+-------------------+-------------------------------+ | Group | Project File | Preferences | System Filetype | Defaults | +==============+=====================+==========================+===================+===============================+ | Filetype | Loads From: project | Loads From: | Loads From: | None | | Build | file | filetypes.xxx file in | filetypes.xxx in | | | | | ~/.config/geany/filedefs | Geany install | | | | Saves To: project | | | | | | file | Saves to: as above, | Saves to: as user | | | | | creating if needed. | preferences left. | | +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+-------------------+-------------------------------+ | Independent | Loads From: project | Loads From: | Loads From: | 1: | | Build | file | geany.conf file in | filetypes.xxx in | Label: _Make | | | | ~/.config/geany | Geany install | Command: make | | | Saves To: project | | | | | | file | Saves to: as above, | Saves to: as user | 2: | | | | creating if needed. | preferences left. | Label: Make Custom _Target | | | | | | Command: make | | | | | | | | | | | | 3: | | | | | | Label: Make _Object | | | | | | Command: make %e.o | +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+-------------------+-------------------------------+ | Execute | Loads From: project | Loads From: | Loads From: | Label: _Execute | | | file or else | geany.conf file in | filetypes.xxx in | Command: ./%e | | | filetype defined in | ~/.config/geany or else | Geany install | | | | project file | filetypes.xxx file in | | | | | | ~/.config/geany/filedefs | Saves To: as user | | | | Saves To: | | preferences left. | | | | project file | Saves To: | | | | | | filetypes.xxx file in | | | | | | ~/.config/geany/filedefs | | | +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+-------------------+-------------------------------+ The following notes on the table may reference cells by coordinate as *(group, source)*: * Filetype filenames - for filetypes.xxx substitute the appropriate extension for the filetype of the current document for xxx - see `filenames`_. * System Filetypes - Labels loaded from these sources are locale sensitive and can contain translations. * *(Filetype build, Project and Preferences)* - preferences use a full filetype file so that users can configure all other filetype preferences as well. Projects can only configure menu items per filetype. Saving in the project file means that there is only one file per project not a whole directory. * *(Filetype-Independent build, System Filetype)* - although conceptually strange, defining filetype-independent commands in a filetype file, this provides the ability to define filetype dependent default menu items. * *(Execute, Project and Preferences)* - the project independent execute and preferences independent execute commands can only be set by hand editing the appropriate file, see `Preferences file format`_ and `Project file format`_. Set Build Commands dialog ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Most of the configuration of the build menu is done through the `Set Build Commands dialog`_. When no project is open, you can edit the configuration sourced from user preferences using the *Build->Set Build Commands* menu item. You can edit the configuration sourced from a project in the *Build* tab of the `Project Properties`_ dialog. The former menu item also shows the project dialog when a project is open. Both use the same form shown below. .. image:: ./images/build_menu_commands_dialog.png The dialog is divided into three sections: * Filetype build commands (selected based on the current document's filetype). * Independent build commands (available regardless of filetype). * Filetype execute commands. The filetype and independent build sections also each contain a field for the regular expression used for parsing command output for error and warning messages. The columns in the first three sections allow setting of the label, command, and working directory to run the command in. An item with an empty label will not be shown in the menu. An empty working directory will default to the directory of the current document. If there is no current document then the command will not run. The dialog will always show the command selected by priority, not just the commands configured in this configuration source. This ensures that you always see what the menu item is going to do if activated. If the current source of the menu item is higher priority than the configuration source you are editing then the command will be shown in the dialog but will be insensitive (greyed out). This can't happen with the project source but can with the preferences source dialog. The clear buttons remove the definition from the configuration source you are editing. When you do this the command from the next lower priority source will be shown. To hide lower priority menu items without having anything show in the menu, configure with nothing in the label but at least one character in the command. Substitutions in commands and working directories ````````````````````````````````````````````````` Before the command is run, the first occurrence of each of the following two character sequences in each of the command and working directory fields is substituted by the items specified below: * %d - the absolute path to the directory of the current file. * %e - the name of the current file without the extension or path. * %f - the name of the current file without the path. * %p - if a project is open, the base path from the project. * %l - the line number at the current cursor position. .. note:: If the base path set in `Project Properties`_ is not an absolute path, then it is taken as relative to the directory of the project file. This allows a project file stored in the source tree to specify all commands and working directories relative to the tree itself, so that the whole tree including the project file, can be moved and even checked into and out of version control without having to re-configure the build menu. Build menu keyboard shortcuts ````````````````````````````` Keyboard shortcuts can be defined for: * the first two filetype build menu items * the first three independent build menu items * the first execute menu item * the fixed menu items (Next/Previous Error, Set Commands) In the keybindings configuration dialog (see `Keybinding preferences`_) these items are identified by the default labels shown in the `Build Menu`_ section above. It is currently not possible to bind keyboard shortcuts to more than these menu items. You can also use underlines in the labels to set mnemonic characters. Old settings ```````````` The configurable Build Menu capability was introduced in Geany 0.19 and required a new section to be added to the configuration files (See `Preferences file format`_). Geany will still load older format project, preferences and filetype file settings and will attempt to map them into the new configuration format. There is not a simple clean mapping between the formats. The mapping used produces the most sensible results for the majority of cases. However, if they do not map the way you want, you may have to manually configure some settings using the `Set Build Commands dialog`_. Any setting configured in either of these dialogs will override settings mapped from older format configuration files. Printing support ---------------- Since Geany 0.13 there has been printing support using GTK's printing API. The printed page(s) will look nearly the same as on your screen in Geany. Additionally, there are some options to modify the printed page(s). .. note:: The background text color is set to white, except for text with a white foreground. This allows dark color schemes to save ink when printing. You can define whether to print line numbers, page numbers at the bottom of each page and whether to print a page header on each page. This header contains the filename of the printed document, the current page number and the date and time of printing. By default, the file name of the document with full path information is added to the header. If you prefer to add only the basename of the file(without any path information) you can set it in the preferences dialog. You can also adjust the format of the date and time added to the page header. For a list of available conversion specifiers see https://docs.gtk.org/glib/method.DateTime.format.html. All of these settings can also be changed in the print dialog just before actual printing is done. On Unix-like systems the provided print dialog offers a print preview. The preview file is opened with a PDF viewer and by default GTK uses ``evince`` for print preview. If you have not installed evince or just want to use another PDF viewer, you can change the program to use in the file ``settings.ini`` (usually found in ``~/.config/gtk-3.0``, see the `GTK documentation`_). For example, use:: [Settings] gtk-print-preview-command = epdfview %f Of course, you can also use xpdf, kpdf or whatever as the print preview command. That command should ideally delete the temporary file referenced by ``%f``. See the `GTK documentation for the setting`_ for more details. .. _GTK documentation: https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/stable/GtkSettings.html#GtkSettings.description .. _GTK documentation for the setting: https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/stable/GtkSettings.html#GtkSettings--gtk-print-preview-command Geany also provides an alternative basic printing support using a custom print command. However, the printed document contains no syntax highlighting. You can adjust the command to which the filename is passed in the preferences dialog. The default command is:: % lpr %f ``%f`` will be substituted by the filename of the current file. Geany will not show errors from the command itself, so you should make sure that it works before(e.g. by trying to execute it from the command line). A nicer example, which many prefer is:: % a2ps -1 --medium=A4 -o - %f | xfprint4 But this depends on a2ps and xfprint4. As a replacement for xfprint4, gtklp or similar programs can be used. Plugins ------- Plugins are loaded at startup, if the *Enable plugin support* general preference is set. There is also a command-line option, ``-p``, which prevents plugins being loaded. Plugins are scanned in the following directories: * ``$prefix/lib/geany`` on Unix-like systems (see `Installation prefix`_) * The ``lib`` subfolder of the installation path on Windows. * The ``plugins`` subfolder of the user configuration directory - see `Configuration file paths`_. * The `Extra plugin path` preference (usually blank) - see `Paths`_. Most plugins add menu items to the *Tools* menu when they are loaded. See also `Plugin documentation`_ for information about single plugins which are included in Geany. Plugin manager ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The Plugin Manager dialog lets you choose which plugins should be loaded at startup. You can also load and unload plugins on the fly using this dialog. Once you click the checkbox for a specific plugin in the dialog, it is loaded or unloaded according to its previous state. By default, no plugins are loaded at startup until you select some. You can also configure some plugin specific options if the plugin provides any. Keybindings ----------- Geany supports the default keyboard shortcuts for the Scintilla editing widget. For a list of these commands, see `Scintilla keyboard commands`_. The Scintilla keyboard shortcuts will be overridden by any custom keybindings with the same keyboard shortcut. Switching documents ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ There are some non-configurable bindings to switch between documents, listed below. These can also be overridden by custom keybindings. =============== ================================== Key Action =============== ================================== Alt-[1-9] Select left-most tab, from 1 to 9. Alt-0 Select right-most tab. =============== ================================== See also `Notebook tab keybindings`_. Configurable keybindings ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ For all actions listed below you can define your own keybindings. Open the Preferences dialog, select the desired action and click on change. In the resulting dialog you can press the key combination you want to assign to the action and it will be saved when you press OK. You can define only one key combination for each action and each key combination can only be defined for one action. The following tables list all customizable keyboard shortcuts, those which are common to many applications are marked with (C) after the shortcut. File keybindings ```````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== New Ctrl-N (C) Creates a new file. Open Ctrl-O (C) Opens a file. Open selected file Ctrl-Shift-O Opens the selected filename. Re-open last closed tab Re-opens the last closed document tab. Save Ctrl-S (C) Saves the current file. Save As Saves the current file under a new name. Save all Ctrl-Shift-S Saves all open files. Close all Ctrl-Shift-W Closes all open files. Close Ctrl-W (C) Closes the current file. Reload file Ctrl-R (C) Reloads the current file. 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. Print Ctrl-P (C) Prints the current file. Quit Ctrl-Q (C) Quits Geany. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Editor keybindings `````````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Undo Ctrl-Z (C) Un-does the last action. Redo Ctrl-Y Re-does the last action. Delete current line(s) Ctrl-K Deletes the current line (and any lines with a selection). Delete to line end Ctrl-Shift-Delete Deletes from the current caret position to the end of the current line. Delete to line start Ctrl-Shift-BackSpace Deletes from the beginning of the line to the current caret position. Duplicate line or selection Ctrl-D Duplicates the current line or selection. Transpose current line Transposes the current line with the previous one. Scroll to current line Ctrl-Shift-L Scrolls the current line into the centre of the view. The cursor position and or an existing selection will not be changed. Scroll up by one line Alt-Up Scrolls the view. Scroll down by one line Alt-Down Scrolls the view. Complete word Ctrl-Space Shows the autocompletion list. If already showing symbol completion, it shows document word completion instead, even if it is not enabled for automatic completion. Likewise if no symbol suggestions are available, it shows document word completion. Show calltip Ctrl-Shift-Space Shows a calltip for the current function or method. Complete snippet Tab If you type a keyword like ``if`` or ``for`` and press this key, it will be completed with a matching template - see `User-definable snippets`_. Suppress snippet completion If you type a construct like ``if`` or ``for`` and press this key, it will not be completed, and a space or tab will be inserted, depending on what the construct completion keybinding is set to. For example, if you have set the construct completion keybinding to a space, then setting this to Shift+space will prevent construct completion and insert a space. Context Action Executes a command and passes the current word (near the cursor position) or selection as an argument. See the section called `Context actions`_. Move cursor in snippet Jumps to the next defined cursor positions in a completed snippets if multiple cursor positions where defined. Word part completion Tab When the autocompletion list is visible, complete the currently selected item up to the next word part. Move line(s) up Alt-PageUp Move the current line or selected lines up by one line. Move line(s) down Alt-PageDown Move the current line or selected lines down by one line. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Clipboard keybindings ````````````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Cut Ctrl-X (C) Cut the current selection to the clipboard. Copy Ctrl-C (C) Copy the current selection to the clipboard. Paste Ctrl-V (C) Paste the clipboard text into the current document. Cut current line(s) Ctrl-Shift-X Cuts the current line (and any lines with a selection) to the clipboard. Copy current line(s) Ctrl-Shift-C Copies the current line (and any lines with a selection) to the clipboard. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Select keybindings `````````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Select all Ctrl-A (C) Makes a selection of all text in the current document. Select current word Alt-Shift-W Selects the current word under the cursor. Select current paragraph Alt-Shift-P Selects the current paragraph under the cursor which is defined by two empty lines around it. Select current line(s) Alt-Shift-L Selects the current line under the cursor (and any partially selected lines). Select to previous word part (Extend) selection to previous word part boundary. Select to next word part (Extend) selection to next word part boundary. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Insert keybindings `````````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Insert date Shift-Alt-D Inserts a customisable date. Insert alternative whitespace Inserts a tab character when spaces should be used for indentation and inserts space characters of the amount of a tab width when tabs should be used for indentation. Insert New Line Before Current Inserts a new line with indentation. Insert New Line After Current Inserts a new line with indentation. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Format keybindings `````````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Toggle case of selection Ctrl-Alt-U Changes the case of the selection. A lowercase selection will be changed into uppercase and vice versa. If the selection contains lower- and uppercase characters, all will be converted to lowercase. Comment line Comments current line or selection. Uncomment line Uncomments current line or selection. Toggle line commentation Ctrl-E Comments a line if it is not commented or removes a comment if the line is commented. Increase indent Ctrl-I Indents the current line or selection by one tab or with spaces in the amount of the tab width setting. Decrease indent Ctrl-U Removes one tab or the amount of spaces of the tab width setting from the indentation of the current line or selection. Increase indent by one space Indents the current line or selection by one space. Decrease indent by one space Deindents the current line or selection by one space. Smart line indent Indents the current line or all selected lines with the same indentation as the previous line. Send to Custom Command 1 (2,3) Ctrl-1 (2,3) Passes the current selection to a configured external command (available for the first 9 configured commands, see `Sending text through custom commands`_ for details). Send Selection to Terminal Sends the current selection or the current line (if there is no selection) to the embedded Terminal (VTE). Reflow lines/block Reformat selected lines or current (indented) text block, breaking lines at the long line marker or the line breaking column if line breaking is enabled for the current document. Join Lines Replace line endings and following indentation with a single space throughout the selection or current (indented) text block. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Settings keybindings ```````````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Preferences Ctrl-Alt-P Opens preferences dialog. Plugin Preferences Opens plugin preferences dialog. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Search keybindings `````````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Find Ctrl-F (C) Opens the Find dialog. Find Next Ctrl-G Finds next result. Find Previous Ctrl-Shift-G Finds previous result. Find Next Selection Finds next occurrence of selected text. Find Previous Selection Finds previous occurrence of selected text. Replace Ctrl-H (C) Opens the Replace dialog. Find in files Ctrl-Shift-F Opens the Find in files dialog. Next message Jumps to the line with the next message in the Messages window. Previous message Jumps to the line with the previous message in the Messages window. Find Usage Ctrl-Shift-E Finds all occurrences of the current word or selection (see note below) in all open documents and displays them in the messages window. Find Document Usage Ctrl-Shift-D Finds all occurrences of the current word or selection (see note below) in the current document and displays them in the messages window. Mark All Ctrl-Shift-M Highlight all matches of the current word/selection (see note below) in the current document with a colored box. If there's nothing to find, or the cursor is next to an existing match, the highlighted matches will be cleared. =============================== ========================= ================================================== .. note:: The keybindings marked "see note below" work like this: if no text is selected, the word under cursor is used, and *it has to match fully* (like when `Match only a whole word` is enabled in the Search dialog). However if some text is selected, then it is matched regardless of word boundaries. Go to keybindings ````````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Navigate forward a location Alt-Right (C) Switches to the next location in the navigation history. See the section called `Code Navigation History`_. Navigate back a location Alt-Left (C) Switches to the previous location in the navigation history. See the section called `Code navigation history`_. Go to line Ctrl-L Focuses the Go to Line entry (if visible) or shows the Go to line dialog. Go to matching brace Ctrl-B If the cursor is ahead or behind a brace, then it is moved to the brace which belongs to the current one. If this keyboard shortcut is pressed again, the cursor is moved back to the first brace. Toggle marker Ctrl-M Set a marker on the current line, or clear the marker if there already is one. Go to next marker Ctrl-. Go to the next marker in the current document. Go to previous marker Ctrl-, Go to the previous marker in the current document. Go to symbol definition Ctrl-T Jump to the definition of the current word or selection. See `Go to symbol definition`_. Go to symbol declaration Ctrl-Shift-T Jump to the declaration of the current word or selection. See `Go to symbol declaration`_. Go to Start of Line Home Move the caret to the start of the line. Behaves differently if smart_home_key_ is set. Go to End of Line End Move the caret to the end of the line. Go to Start of Display Line Alt-Home Move the caret to the start of the display line. This is useful when you use line wrapping and want to jump to the start of the wrapped, virtual line, not the real start of the whole line. If the line is not wrapped, it behaves like `Go to Start of Line`. Go to End of Display Line Alt-End Move the caret to the end of the display line. If the line is not wrapped, it behaves like `Go to End of Line`. Go to Previous Word Part Ctrl-/ Go to the previous part of the current word. Go to Next Word Part Ctrl-\\ Go to the next part of the current word. =============================== ========================= ================================================== View keybindings ```````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Fullscreen F11 (C) Switches to fullscreen mode. Toggle Messages Window Toggles the message window (status and compiler messages) on and off. Toggle Sidebar Shows or hides the sidebar. Toggle all additional widgets Hide and show all additional widgets like the notebook tabs, the toolbar, the messages window and the status bar. Zoom In Ctrl-+ (C) Zooms in the text. Zoom Out Ctrl-- (C) Zooms out the text. Zoom Reset Ctrl-0 Reset any previous zoom on the text. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Focus keybindings ````````````````` ================================ ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description ================================ ========================= ================================================== Switch to Editor F2 Switches to editor widget. Also reshows the document statistics line (after a short timeout). Switch to Search Bar F7 Switches to the search bar in the toolbar (if visible). Switch to Message Window Focus the Message Window's current tab. Switch to Compiler Focus the Compiler message window tab. Switch to Messages Focus the Messages message window tab. Switch to Scribble F6 Switches to scribble widget. Switch to VTE F4 Switches to VTE widget. Switch to Sidebar Focus the Sidebar. Switch to Sidebar Symbol List Focus the Symbol list tab in the Sidebar (if visible). Switch to Sidebar Document List Focus the Document list tab in the Sidebar (if visible). ================================ ========================= ================================================== Notebook tab keybindings ```````````````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Switch to left document Ctrl-PageUp (C) Switches to the previous open document. Switch to right document Ctrl-PageDown (C) Switches to the next open document. Switch to last used document Ctrl-Tab Switches to the previously shown document (if it's still open). Holding Ctrl (or another modifier if the keybinding has been changed) will show a dialog, then repeated presses of the keybinding will switch to the 2nd-last used document, 3rd-last, etc. Also known as Most-Recently-Used documents switching. Move document left Ctrl-Shift-PageUp Changes the current document with the left hand one. Move document right Ctrl-Shift-PageDown Changes the current document with the right hand one. Move document first Moves the current document to the first position. Move document last Moves the current document to the last position. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Document keybindings ```````````````````` ==================================== ==================== ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description ==================================== ==================== ================================================== Clone See `Cloning documents`_. Replace tabs with space Replaces all tabs with the right amount of spaces in the whole document, or the current selection. Replace spaces with tabs Replaces leading spaces with tab characters in the whole document, or the current selection. Toggle current fold Toggles the folding state of the current code block. Fold all Folds all contractible code blocks. Unfold all Unfolds all contracted code blocks. Reload symbol list Ctrl-Shift-R Reloads the symbol list. Toggle Line wrapping Enables or disables wrapping of long lines. Toggle Line breaking Enables or disables automatic breaking of long lines at a configurable column. Remove Markers Remove any markers on lines or words which were set by using 'Mark All' in the search dialog or by manually marking lines. Remove Error Indicators Remove any error indicators in the current document. Remove Markers and Error Indicators Combines ``Remove Markers`` and ``Remove Error Indicators``. ==================================== ==================== ================================================== Project keybindings ``````````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== New Create a new project. Open Opens a project file. Properties Shows project properties. Close Close the current project. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Build keybindings ````````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Compile F8 Compiles the current file. Build F9 Builds (compiles if necessary and links) the current file. Make all Shift-F9 Builds the current file with the Make tool. Make custom target Ctrl-Shift-F9 Builds the current file with the Make tool and a given target. Make object Shift-F8 Compiles the current file with the Make tool. Next error Jumps to the line with the next error from the last build process. Previous error Jumps to the line with the previous error from the last build process. Run F5 Executes the current file in a terminal emulation. Set Build Commands Opens the build commands dialog. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Tools keybindings ````````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Show Color Chooser Opens the Color Chooser dialog. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Help keybindings ```````````````` =============================== ========================= ================================================== Action Default shortcut Description =============================== ========================= ================================================== Help F1 (C) Opens the manual. =============================== ========================= ================================================== Configuration files =================== .. warning:: You must use UTF-8 encoding *without BOM* for configuration files. Configuration file paths ------------------------ Geany has default configuration files installed for the system and also per-user configuration files. The system files should not normally be edited because they will be overwritten when upgrading Geany. The user configuration directory can be overridden with the ``-c`` switch, but this is not normally done. See `Command line options`_. .. note:: Any missing subdirectories in the user configuration directory will be created when Geany starts. You can check the paths Geany is using with *Help->Debug Messages*. Near the top there should be 2 lines with something like:: Geany-INFO: System data dir: /usr/share/geany Geany-INFO: User config dir: /home/username/.config/geany Paths on Unix-like systems ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The system path is ``$prefix/share/geany``, where ``$prefix`` is the path where Geany is installed (see `Installation prefix`_). The user configuration directory is normally: ``/home/username/.config/geany`` Paths on Windows ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The system path is the ``data`` subfolder of the installation path on Windows. The user configuration directory might vary, but on Windows XP it's: ``C:\Documents and Settings\UserName\Application Data\geany`` On Windows 7 and above you most likely will find it at: ``C:\users\UserName\Roaming\geany`` Tools menu items ---------------- There's a *Configuration files* submenu in the *Tools* menu that contains items for some of the available user configuration files. Clicking on one opens it in the editor for you to update. Geany will reload the file after you have saved it. .. note:: Other configuration files not shown here will need to be opened manually, and will not be automatically reloaded when saved. (see *Reload Configuration* below). There's also a *Reload Configuration* item which can be used if you updated one of the other configuration files, or modified or added template files. *Reload Configuration* is also necessary to update syntax highlighting colors. .. note:: Syntax highlighting colors aren't updated in open documents after saving filetypes.common as this may take a significant amount of time. Customizing Geany's appearance using GTK+ CSS ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ To override GTK+ CSS styles, you can use traditional mechanisms or you can use the *Tools->Configuration files* menu to open a file named ``geany.css`` which will be loaded after other CSS styles are applied to allow overriding the default styles. Geany offers a number of CSS IDs which can be used to taylor its appearance. Among the more interesting include: * ``geany-compiler-context`` - the style used for build command output surrounding errors * ``geany-compiler-error`` - the style used for build command errors * ``geany-compiler-message`` - the style other output encountered while running build command * ``geany-document-status-changed`` - the style for document tab labels when the document is changed * ``geany-document-status-disk-changed`` - the style for document tab labels when the file on disk has changed * ``geany-document-status-readyonly``` - the style for document tab labels when the document is read-only * ``geany-search-entry-no-match`` - the style of find/replace dialog entries when no match is found * ``geany-terminal-dirty`` - the style for the message window Terminal tab label when the terminal output has changed. Global configuration file ------------------------- System administrators can add a global configuration file for Geany which will be used when starting Geany and a user configuration file does not exist. The global configuration file is read from ``geany.conf`` in the system configuration path - see `Configuration file paths`_. It can contain any settings which are found in the usual configuration file created by Geany, but does not have to contain all settings. .. note:: This feature is mainly intended for package maintainers or system admins who want to set up Geany in a multi user environment and set some sane default values for this environment. Usually users won't need to do that. Filetype definition files ------------------------- All color definitions and other filetype specific settings are stored in the filetype definition files. Those settings are colors for syntax highlighting, general settings like comment characters or word delimiter characters as well as compiler and linker settings. See also `Configuration file paths`_. Filenames ^^^^^^^^^ Each filetype has a corresponding filetype definition file. The format for built-in filetype `Foo` is:: filetypes.foo The extension is normally just the filetype name in lower case. However there are some exceptions: =============== ========= Filetype Extension =============== ========= C++ cpp C# cs Make makefile Matlab/Octave matlab =============== ========= There is also the `special file filetypes.common`_. For `custom filetypes`_, the filename for `Foo` is different:: filetypes.Foo.conf See the link for details. System files ^^^^^^^^^^^^ The system-wide filetype configuration files can be found in the system configuration path and are called ``filetypes.$ext``, where $ext is the name of the filetype. For every filetype there is a corresponding definition file. There is one exception: ``filetypes.common`` -- this file is for general settings, which are not specific to a certain filetype. .. warning:: It is not recommended that users edit the system-wide files, because they will be overridden when Geany is updated. User files ^^^^^^^^^^ To change the settings, copy a file from the system configuration path to the subdirectory ``filedefs`` in your user configuration directory. Then you can edit the file and the changes will still be available after an update of Geany. Alternatively, you can create the file yourself and add only the settings you want to change. All missing settings will be read from the corresponding system configuration file. Custom filetypes ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ At startup Geany looks for ``filetypes.*.conf`` files in the system and user filetype paths, adding any filetypes found with the name matching the '``*``' wildcard - e.g. ``filetypes.Bar.conf``. Custom filetypes are not as powerful as built-in filetypes, but support for the following has been implemented: * Recognizing and setting the filetype (after the user has manually updated the `filetype extensions`_ file). * `Filetype group membership`_. * Reading filetype settings in the ``[settings]`` section, including: * Using an existing syntax highlighting lexer (`lexer_filetype`_ key). * Using an existing tags parser (`tag_parser`_ key). * Build commands (``[build-menu]`` section). * Loading global tags files (sharing the ``tag_parser`` filetype's namespace). See `Filetype configuration`_ for details on each setting. Creating a custom filetype from an existing filetype ```````````````````````````````````````````````````` Because most filetype settings will relate to the syntax highlighting (e.g. styling, keywords, ``lexer_properties`` sections), it is best to copy an existing filetype file that uses the lexer you wish to use as the basis of a custom filetype, using the correct filename extension format shown above, e.g.:: cp filetypes.foo filetypes.Bar.conf Then add the ``lexer_filetype=Foo`` setting (if not already present) and add/adjust other settings. .. warning:: The ``[styling]`` and ``[keywords]`` sections have key names specific to each filetype/lexer. You must follow the same names - in particular, some lexers only support one keyword list, or none. Filetype configuration ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ As well as the sections listed below, each filetype file can contain a [build-menu] section as described in `[build-menu] section`_. [styling] section ````````````````` In this section the colors for syntax highlighting are defined. The manual format is: * ``key=foreground_color;background_color;bold_flag;italic_flag`` Colors have to be specified as RGB hex values prefixed by 0x or # similar to HTML/CSS hex triplets. For example, all of the following are valid values for pure red; 0xff0000, 0xf00, #ff0000, or #f00. The values are case-insensitive but it is a good idea to use lower-case. Note that you can also use *named colors* as well by substituting the color value with the name of a color as defined in the ``[named_colors]`` section, see the `[named_colors] Section`_ for more information. Bold and italic are flags and should only be "true" or "false". If their value is something other than "true" or "false", "false" is assumed. You can omit fields to use the values from the style named ``"default"``. E.g. ``key=0xff0000;;true`` This makes the key style have red foreground text, default background color text and bold emphasis. Using a named style ******************* The second format uses a *named style* name to reference a style defined in filetypes.common. * ``key=named_style`` * ``key2=named_style2,bold,italic`` The bold and italic parts are optional, and if present are used to toggle the bold or italic flags to the opposite of the named style's flags. In contrast to style definition booleans, they are a literal ",bold,italic" and commas are used instead of semi-colons. E.g. ``key=comment,italic`` This makes the key style match the ``"comment"`` named style, but with italic emphasis. To define named styles, see the filetypes.common `[named_styles] Section`_. Reading styles from another filetype ************************************ You can automatically copy all of the styles from another filetype definition file by using the following syntax for the ``[styling]`` group:: [styling=Foo] Where Foo is a filetype name. The corresponding ``[styling]`` section from ``filetypes.foo`` will be read. This is useful when the same lexer is being used for multiple filetypes (e.g. C/C++/C#/Java/etc). For example, to make the C++ styling the same as the C styling, you would put the following in ``filetypes.cpp``:: [styling=C] [keywords] section `````````````````` This section contains keys for different keyword lists specific to the filetype. Some filetypes do not support keywords, so adding a new key will not work. You can only add or remove keywords to/from an existing list. .. important:: The keywords list must be in one line without line ending characters. [lexer_properties] section `````````````````````````` Here any special properties for the Scintilla lexer can be set in the format ``key.name.field=some.value``. Properties Geany uses are listed in the system filetype files. To find other properties you need Geany's source code:: egrep -o 'GetProperty\w*\("([^"]+)"[^)]+\)' scintilla/Lex*.cxx [settings] section `````````````````` extension This is the default file extension used when saving files, not including the period character (``.``). The extension used should match one of the patterns associated with that filetype (see `Filetype extensions`_). *Example:* ``extension=cxx`` wordchars These characters define word boundaries when making selections and searching using word matching options. *Example:* (look at system filetypes.\* files) .. note:: This overrides the *wordchars* filetypes.common setting, and has precedence over the *whitespace_chars* setting. comment_single A character or string which is used to comment code. If you want to use multiline comments only, don't set this but rather comment_open and comment_close. Single-line comments are used in priority over multiline comments to comment a line, e.g. with the `Comment/Uncomment line` command. *Example:* ``comment_single=//`` comment_open A character or string which is used to comment code. You need to also set comment_close to really use multiline comments. If you want to use single-line comments, prefer setting comment_single. Multiline comments are used in priority over single-line comments to comment a block, e.g. template comments. *Example:* ``comment_open=/*`` comment_close If multiline comments are used, this is the character or string to close the comment. *Example:* ``comment_close=*/`` comment_use_indent Set this to false if a comment character or string should start at column 0 of a line. If set to true it uses any indentation of the line. Note: Comment indentation ``comment_use_indent=true`` would generate this if a line is commented (e.g. with Ctrl-D):: #command_example(); ``comment_use_indent=false`` would generate this if a line is commented (e.g. with Ctrl-D):: # command_example(); Note: This setting only works for single line comments (like '//', '#' or ';'). *Example:* ``comment_use_indent=true`` context_action_cmd A command which can be executed on the current word or the current selection. Example usage: Open the API documentation for the current function call at the cursor position. The command can be set for every filetype or if not set, a global command will be used. The command itself can be specified without the full path, then it is searched in $PATH. But for security reasons, it is recommended to specify the full path to the command. The wildcard %s will be replaced by the current word at the cursor position or by the current selection. Hint: for PHP files the following could be quite useful: context_action_cmd=firefox "https://www.php.net/%s" *Example:* ``context_action_cmd=devhelp -s "%s"`` .. _tag_parser: tag_parser The TagManager language name, e.g. "C". Usually the same as the filetype name. .. _lexer_filetype: lexer_filetype A filetype name to setup syntax highlighting from another filetype. This must not be recursive, i.e. it should be a filetype name that doesn't use the *lexer_filetype* key itself, e.g.:: lexer_filetype=C #lexer_filetype=C++ The second line is wrong, because ``filetypes.cpp`` itself uses ``lexer_filetype=C``, which would be recursive. symbol_list_sort_mode What the default symbol list sort order should be. ===== ======================================== Value Meaning ===== ======================================== 0 Sort symbols by name 1 Sort symbols by appearance (line number) ===== ======================================== .. _xml_indent_tags: xml_indent_tags If this setting is set to *true*, a new line after a line ending with an unclosed XML/HTML tag will be automatically indented. This only applies to filetypes for which the HTML or XML lexer is used. Such filetypes have this setting in their system configuration files. mime_type The MIME type for this file type, e.g. "text/x-csrc". This is used for example to chose the icon to display for this file type. [indentation] section ````````````````````` This section allows definition of default indentation settings specific to the file type, overriding the ones configured in the preferences. This can be useful for file types requiring specific indentation settings (e.g. tabs only for Makefile). These settings don't override auto-detection if activated. width The forced indentation width. type The forced indentation type. ===== ======================= Value Indentation type ===== ======================= 0 Spaces only 1 Tabs only 2 Mixed (tabs and spaces) ===== ======================= [build-menu] filetype section ````````````````````````````` This supports the same keys as the ``geany.conf`` `[build-menu] section`_. Example:: FT_00_LB=_Compile FT_00_CM=gcc -c "%f" FT_00_WD= FT_01_LB=_Build FT_01_CM=gcc -o "%e" "%f" FT_01_WD= EX_00_LB=_Execute EX_00_CM="./%e" EX_00_WD= error_regex=^([^:]+):([0-9]+): [build_settings] section ```````````````````````` As of Geany 0.19 this section is for legacy support. Values that are set in the [build-menu] section will override those in this section. If any build menu item settings have been configured in the `Set Build Commands dialog`_ (or the *Build* tab of the `Project Properties`_ dialog), then these settings are stored in the [build-menu] section and will override the settings in this section for that item. error_regex See the [build-menu] section for details. **Build commands** compiler This item specifies the command to compile source code files. But it is also possible to use it with interpreted languages like Perl or Python. With these filetypes you can use this option as a kind of syntax parser, which sends output to the compiler message window. You should quote the filename to also support filenames with spaces. The following wildcards for filenames are available: * %f -- complete filename without path * %e -- filename without path and without extension *Example:* ``compiler=gcc -Wall -c "%f"`` linker This item specifies the command to link the file. If the file is not already compiled, it will be compiled while linking. The -o option is automatically added by Geany. This item works well with GNU gcc, but may be problematic with other compilers (esp. with the linker). *Example:* ``linker=gcc -Wall "%f"`` run_cmd Use this item to execute your file. It has to have been built already. Use the %e wildcard to have only the name of the executable (i.e. without extension) or use the %f wildcard if you need the complete filename, e.g. for shell scripts. *Example:* ``run_cmd="./%e"`` Special file filetypes.common ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ There is a special filetype definition file called filetypes.common. This file defines some general non-filetype-specific settings. You can open the user filetypes.common with the *Tools->Configuration Files->filetypes.common* menu item. This adds the default settings to the user file if the file doesn't exist. Alternatively the file can be created manually, adding only the settings you want to change. All missing settings will be read from the system file. .. note:: See the `Filetype configuration`_ section for how to define styles. [named_styles] section `````````````````````` Named styles declared here can be used in the [styling] section of any filetypes.* file. For example: *In filetypes.common*:: [named_styles] foo=0xc00000;0xffffff;false;true bar=foo *In filetypes.c*:: [styling] comment=foo This saves copying and pasting the whole style definition into several different files. .. note:: You can define aliases for named styles, as shown with the ``bar`` entry in the above example, but they must be declared after the original style. [named_colors] section `````````````````````` Named colors declared here can be used in the ``[styling]`` or ``[named_styles]`` section of any filetypes.* file or color scheme. For example:: [named_colors] my_red_color=#FF0000 my_blue_color=#0000FF [named_styles] foo=my_red_color;my_blue_color;false;true This allows to define a color palette by name so that to change a color scheme-wide only involves changing the hex value in a single location. [styling] section ````````````````` default This is the default style. It is used for styling files without a filetype set. *Example:* ``default=0x000000;0xffffff;false;false`` selection The style for coloring selected text. The format is: * Foreground color * Background color * Use foreground color * Use background color The colors are only set if the 3rd or 4th argument is true. When the colors are not overridden, the default is a dark grey background with syntax highlighted foreground text. *Example:* ``selection=0xc0c0c0;0x00007F;true;true`` brace_good The style for brace highlighting when a matching brace was found. *Example:* ``brace_good=0xff0000;0xFFFFFF;true;false`` brace_bad The style for brace highlighting when no matching brace was found. *Example:* ``brace_bad=0x0000ff;0xFFFFFF;true;false`` caret The style for coloring the caret(the blinking cursor). Only first and third argument is interpreted. Set the third argument to true to change the caret into a block caret. *Example:* ``caret=0x000000;0x0;false;false`` caret_width The width for the caret(the blinking cursor). Only the first argument is interpreted. The width is specified in pixels with a maximum of three pixel. Use the width 0 to make the caret invisible. *Example:* ``caret_width=3`` current_line The style for coloring the background of the current line. Only the second and third arguments are interpreted. The second argument is the background color. Use the third argument to enable or disable background highlighting for the current line (has to be true/false). *Example:* ``current_line=0x0;0xe5e5e5;true;false`` indent_guide The style for coloring the indentation guides. Only the first and second arguments are interpreted. *Example:* ``indent_guide=0xc0c0c0;0xffffff;false;false`` white_space The style for coloring the white space if it is shown. The first both arguments define the foreground and background colors, the third argument sets whether to use the defined foreground color or to use the color defined by each filetype for the white space. The fourth argument defines whether to use the background color. *Example:* ``white_space=0xc0c0c0;0xffffff;true;true`` margin_linenumber Line number margin foreground and background colors. .. _Folding Settings: margin_folding Fold margin foreground and background colors. fold_symbol_highlight Highlight color of folding symbols. folding_style The style of folding icons. Only first and second arguments are used. Valid values for the first argument are: * 1 -- for boxes * 2 -- for circles * 3 -- for arrows * 4 -- for +/- Valid values for the second argument are: * 0 -- for no lines * 1 -- for straight lines * 2 -- for curved lines *Default:* ``folding_style=1;1;`` *Arrows:* ``folding_style=3;0;`` folding_horiz_line Draw a thin horizontal line at the line where text is folded. Only first argument is used. Valid values for the first argument are: * 0 -- disable, do not draw a line * 1 -- draw the line above folded text * 2 -- draw the line below folded text *Example:* ``folding_horiz_line=0;0;false;false`` line_wrap_visuals First argument: drawing of visual flags to indicate a line is wrapped. This is a bitmask of the values: * 0 -- No visual flags * 1 -- Visual flag at end of subline of a wrapped line * 2 -- Visual flag at begin of subline of a wrapped line. Subline is indented by at least 1 to make room for the flag. Second argument: wether the visual flags to indicate a line is wrapped are drawn near the border or near the text. This is a bitmask of the values: * 0 -- Visual flags drawn near border * 1 -- Visual flag at end of subline drawn near text * 2 -- Visual flag at begin of subline drawn near text Only first and second arguments are interpreted. *Example:* ``line_wrap_visuals=3;0;false;false`` line_wrap_indent First argument: sets the size of indentation of sublines for wrapped lines in terms of the width of a space, only used when the second argument is ``0``. Second argument: wrapped sublines can be indented to the position of their first subline or one more indent level. Possible values: * 0 - Wrapped sublines aligned to left of window plus amount set by the first argument * 1 - Wrapped sublines are aligned to first subline indent (use the same indentation) * 2 - Wrapped sublines are aligned to first subline indent plus one more level of indentation Only first and second arguments are interpreted. *Example:* ``line_wrap_indent=0;1;false;false`` translucency Translucency for the current line (first argument) and the selection (second argument). Values between 0 and 256 are accepted. Note for Windows 95, 98 and ME users: keep this value at 256 to disable translucency otherwise Geany might crash. Only the first and second arguments are interpreted. *Example:* ``translucency=256;256;false;false`` marker_line The style for a highlighted line (e.g when using Goto line or goto symbol). The foreground color (first argument) is only used when the Markers margin is enabled (see View menu). Only the first and second arguments are interpreted. *Example:* ``marker_line=0x000000;0xffff00;false;false`` marker_search The style for a marked search results (when using "Mark" in Search dialogs). The second argument sets the background color for the drawn rectangle. Only the second argument is interpreted. *Example:* ``marker_search=0x000000;0xb8f4b8;false;false`` marker_mark The style for a marked line (e.g when using the "Toggle Marker" keybinding (Ctrl-M)). The foreground color (first argument) is only used when the Markers margin is enabled (see View menu). Only the first and second arguments are interpreted. *Example:* ``marker_mark=0x000000;0xb8f4b8;false;false`` marker_translucency Translucency for the line marker (first argument) and the search marker (second argument). Values between 0 and 256 are accepted. Note for Windows 95, 98 and ME users: keep this value at 256 to disable translucency otherwise Geany might crash. Only the first and second arguments are interpreted. *Example:* ``marker_translucency=256;256;false;false`` line_height Amount of space to be drawn above and below the line's baseline. The first argument defines the amount of space to be drawn above the line, the second argument defines the amount of space to be drawn below. Only the first and second arguments are interpreted. *Example:* ``line_height=0;0;false;false`` calltips The style for coloring the calltips. The first two arguments define the foreground and background colors, the third and fourth arguments set whether to use the defined colors. *Example:* ``calltips=0xc0c0c0;0xffffff;false;false`` indicator_error The color of the error indicator. Only the first argument (foreground color) is used. *Example:* ``indicator_error=0xff0000`` [settings] section `````````````````` whitespace_chars Characters to treat as whitespace. These characters are ignored when moving, selecting and deleting across word boundaries (see `Scintilla keyboard commands`_). This should include space (\\s) and tab (\\t). *Example:* ``whitespace_chars=\s\t!\"#$%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?@[\\]^`{|}~`` wordchars These characters define word boundaries when making selections and searching using word matching options. *Example:* ``wordchars=_abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0123456789`` .. note:: This has precedence over the *whitespace_chars* setting. Filetype extensions ------------------- .. note:: To change the default filetype extension used when saving a new file, see `Filetype definition files`_. You can override the list of file extensions that Geany uses to detect filetypes using the user ``filetype_extensions.conf`` file. Use the *Tools->Configuration Files->filetype_extensions.conf* menu item. See also `Configuration file paths`_. You should only list lines for filetype extensions that you want to override in the user configuration file and remove or comment out others. The patterns are listed after the ``=`` sign, using a semi-colon separated list of patterns which should be matched for that filetype. For example, to override the filetype extensions for Make, the file should look like:: [Extensions] Make=Makefile*;*.mk;Buildfile; Filetype group membership ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Filetype groups are used in the `Document->Set Filetype` menu. Group membership is also stored in ``filetype_extensions.conf``. This file is used to store information Geany needs at startup, whereas the separate filetype definition files hold information only needed when a document with their filetype is used. The format looks like:: [Groups] Programming=C;C++; Script=Perl;Python; Markup=HTML;XML; Misc=Diff;Conf; None=None; The key names cannot be configured. .. note:: Group membership is only read at startup. .. tip:: You can make commonly used filetypes appear in the top-level of the filetype menu by adding them to the `None` group, e.g. `None=C;Python`. Preferences file format ----------------------- The user preferences file ``geany.conf`` holds settings for all the items configured in the preferences dialog. This file should not be edited while Geany is running as the file will be overwritten when the preferences in Geany are changed or Geany is quit. [build-menu] section ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The [build-menu] section contains the configuration of the build menu. This section can occur in filetype, preferences and project files and always has the format described here. Different menu items are loaded from different files, see the table in the `Build Menu Configuration`_ section for details. All the settings can be configured from the dialogs except the execute command in filetype files and filetype definitions in the project file, so these are the only ones which need hand editing. Menu commands ````````````` The build-menu section stores one entry for each setting for each menu item that is configured. The keys for these settings have the format: ``GG_NN_FF`` where: * GG - is the menu item group, - FT for filetype build - NF for independent (non-filetype) build - EX for execute * NN - is a two decimal digit number of the item within the group, starting at 00 * FF - is the field, - LB for label - CM for command - WD for working directory See `[build-menu] filetype section`_ for an example. Error regular expression ```````````````````````` error_regex This is a Perl-compatible regular expression (PCRE) to parse a filename (absolute or relative) and line number from the build output. If undefined, Geany will fall back to its default error message parsing. Only the first two match groups will be read by Geany. These groups can occur in any order: the match group consisting of only digits will be used as the line number, and the other group as the filename. In no group consists of only digits, the match will fail. *Example:* ``error_regex=^(.+):([0-9]+):[0-9]+`` This will parse a message such as: ``test.py:7:24: E202 whitespace before ']'`` Project file format ------------------- The project file contains project related settings and possibly a record of the current session files. [build-menu] additions ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The project file also can have extra fields in the [build-menu] section in addition to those listed in `[build-menu] section`_ above. When filetype menu items are configured for the project they are stored in the project file. The ``filetypes`` entry is a list of the filetypes which exist in the project file. For each filetype the entries for that filetype have the format defined in `[build-menu] section`_ but the key is prefixed by the name of the filetype as it appears in the ``filetypes`` entry, eg the entry for the label of filetype menu item 0 for the C filetype would be ``CFT_00_LB=Label`` Templates --------- Geany supports the following templates: * ChangeLog entry * File header * Function description * Short GPL notice * Short BSD notice * File templates To use these templates, just open the Edit menu or open the popup menu by right-clicking in the editor widget, and choose "Insert Comments" and insert templates as you want. Some templates (like File header or ChangeLog entry) will always be inserted at the top of the file. To insert a function description, the cursor must be inside of the function, so that the function name can be determined automatically. The description will be positioned correctly one line above the function, just check it out. If the cursor is not inside of a function or the function name cannot be determined, the inserted function description won't contain the correct function name but "unknown" instead. .. note:: Geany automatically reloads template information when it notices you save a file in the user's template configuration directory. You can also force this by selecting *Tools->Reload Configuration*. Template meta data ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Meta data can be used with all templates, but by default user set meta data is only used for the ChangeLog and File header templates. In the configuration dialog you can find a tab "Templates" (see `Template preferences`_). You can define the default values which will be inserted in the templates. File templates ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ File templates are templates used as the basis of a new file. To use them, choose the *New (with Template)* menu item from the *File* menu. If there is more than one template for a filetype then they will be grouped in a submenu. By default, file templates are installed for some filetypes. Custom file templates can be added by creating the appropriate template file. You can also edit the default file templates. The file's contents are just the text to place in the document, with optional template wildcards like ``{fileheader}``. The fileheader wildcard can be placed anywhere, but it's usually put on the first line of the file, followed by a blank line. Adding file templates ````````````````````` File templates are read from ``templates/files`` under the `Configuration file paths`_. The filetype to use is detected from the template file's extension, if any. For example, creating a file ``module.c`` would add a menu item which created a new document with the filetype set to 'C'. The template file is read from disk when the corresponding menu item is clicked. Customizing templates ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Each template can be customized to your needs. The templates are stored in the ``~/.config/geany/templates/`` directory (see the section called `Command line options`_ for further information about the configuration directory). Just open the desired template with an editor (ideally, Geany ;-) ) and edit the template to your needs. There are some wildcards which will be automatically replaced by Geany at startup. Template wildcards `````````````````` All wildcards must be enclosed by "{" and "}", e.g. {date}. **Wildcards for character escaping** ============== ============================================= ======================================= Wildcard Description Available in ============== ============================================= ======================================= ob { Opening Brace (used to prevent other file templates, file header, snippets. wildcards being expanded). cb } Closing Brace. file templates, file header, snippets. pc \% Percent (used to escape e.g. ``%block%`` in snippets). snippets. ============== ============================================= ======================================= Global wildcards **************** These are configurable, see `Template preferences`_. ============== ============================================= ======================================= Wildcard Description Available in ============== ============================================= ======================================= developer The name of the developer. file templates, file header, function description, ChangeLog entry, bsd, gpl, snippets. initial The developer's initials, e.g. "ET" for file templates, file header, Enrico Tröger or "JFD" for John Foobar Doe. function description, ChangeLog entry, bsd, gpl, snippets. mail The email address of the developer. file templates, file header, function description, ChangeLog entry, bsd, gpl, snippets. company The company the developer is working for. file templates, file header, function description, ChangeLog entry, bsd, gpl, snippets. version The initial version of a new file. file templates, file header, function description, ChangeLog entry, bsd, gpl, snippets. ============== ============================================= ======================================= Date & time wildcards ********************* The format for these wildcards can be changed in the preferences dialog, see `Template preferences`_. For a list of available conversion specifiers see https://docs.gtk.org/glib/method.DateTime.format.html. ============== ============================================= ======================================= Wildcard Description Available in ============== ============================================= ======================================= year The current year. Default format is: YYYY. file templates, file header, function description, ChangeLog entry, bsd, gpl, snippets. date The current date. Default format: file templates, file header, YYYY-MM-DD. function description, ChangeLog entry, bsd, gpl, snippets. datetime The current date and time. Default format: file templates, file header, DD.MM.YYYY HH:mm:ss ZZZZ. function description, ChangeLog entry, bsd, gpl, snippets. ============== ============================================= ======================================= Dynamic wildcards ***************** ============== ============================================= ======================================= Wildcard Description Available in ============== ============================================= ======================================= untitled The string "untitled" (this will be file templates, file header, translated to your locale), used in function description, ChangeLog entry, file templates. bsd, gpl, snippets. geanyversion The actual Geany version, e.g. file templates, file header, "Geany |(version)|". function description, ChangeLog entry, bsd, gpl, snippets. filename The filename of the current file. file header, snippets, file For new files, it's only replaced when templates. first saving if found on the first 4 lines of the file. project The current project's name, if any. file header, snippets, file templates. description The current project's description, if any. file header, snippets, file templates. functionname The function name of the function at the function description. cursor position. This wildcard will only be replaced in the function description template. command:path Executes the specified command and replace file templates, file header, the wildcard with the command's standard function description, ChangeLog entry, output. See `Special {command:} wildcard`_ bsd, gpl, snippets. for details. ============== ============================================= ======================================= Template insertion wildcards **************************** ============== ============================================= ======================================= Wildcard Description Available in ============== ============================================= ======================================= gpl This wildcard inserts a short GPL notice. file header. bsd This wildcard inserts a BSD licence notice. file header. fileheader The file header template. This wildcard snippets, file templates. will only be replaced in file templates. ============== ============================================= ======================================= Special {command:} wildcard *************************** The ``{command:}`` wildcard is a special one because it can execute a specified command and put the command's output (stdout) into the template. Example:: {command:uname -a} will result in:: Linux localhost 2.6.9-023stab046.2-smp #1 SMP Mon Dec 10 15:04:55 MSK 2007 x86_64 GNU/Linux Using this wildcard you can insert nearly any arbitrary text into the template. In the environment of the executed command the variables ``GEANY_FILENAME``, ``GEANY_FILETYPE`` and ``GEANY_FUNCNAME`` are set. The value of these variables is filled in only if Geany knows about it. For example, ``GEANY_FUNCNAME`` is only filled within the function description template. However, these variables are *always* set, just maybe with an empty value. You can easily access them e.g. within an executed shell script using:: $GEANY_FILENAME .. note:: If the specified command could not be found or not executed, the wildcard is substituted by an empty string. In such cases, you can find the occurred error message on Geany's standard error and in the *Help->Debug Messages* dialog. Customizing the toolbar ----------------------- You can add, remove and reorder the elements in the toolbar by using the toolbar editor, or by manually editing the configuration file ``ui_toolbar.xml``. The toolbar editor can be opened from the preferences editor on the Toolbar tab or by right-clicking on the toolbar itself and choosing it from the menu. Manually editing the toolbar layout ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ To override the system-wide configuration file, copy it to your user configuration directory (see `Configuration file paths`_). For example:: % cp /usr/local/share/geany/ui_toolbar.xml /home/username/.config/geany/ Then edit it and add any of the available elements listed in the file or remove any of the existing elements. Of course, you can also reorder the elements as you wish and add or remove additional separators. This file must be valid XML, otherwise the global toolbar UI definition will be used instead. Your changes are applied once you save the file. .. note:: (1) You cannot add new actions which are not listed below. (2) Everything you add or change must be inside the /ui/toolbar/ path. Available toolbar elements ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ================== ============================================================================== Element name Description ================== ============================================================================== New Create a new file Open Open an existing file Save Save the current file SaveAll Save all open files Reload Reload the current file from disk Close Close the current file CloseAll Close all open files Print Print the current file Cut Cut the current selection Copy Copy the current selection Paste Paste the contents of the clipboard Delete Delete the current selection Undo Undo the last modification Redo Redo the last modification NavBack Navigate back a location NavFor Navigate forward a location Compile Compile the current file Build Build the current file, includes a submenu for Make commands. Geany remembers the last chosen action from the submenu and uses this as default action when the button itself is clicked. Run Run or view the current file Color Open a color chooser dialog, to interactively pick colors from a palette ZoomIn Zoom in the text ZoomOut Zoom out the text UnIndent Decrease indentation Indent Increase indentation Replace Replace text in the current document SearchEntry The search field belonging to the 'Search' element (can be used alone) Search Find the entered text in the current file (only useful if you also use 'SearchEntry') GotoEntry The goto field belonging to the 'Goto' element (can be used alone) Goto Jump to the entered line number (only useful if you also use 'GotoEntry') Preferences Show the preferences dialog Quit Quit Geany ================== ============================================================================== Plugin documentation ==================== HTML Characters --------------- The HTML Characters plugin helps when working with special characters in XML/HTML, e.g. German Umlauts ü and ä. Insert entity dialog ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ When the plugin is enabled, you can insert special character entities using *Tools->Insert Special HTML Characters*. This opens up a dialog where you can find a huge amount of special characters sorted by category that you might like to use inside your document. You can expand and collapse the categories by clicking on the little arrow on the left hand side. Once you have found the desired character click on it and choose "Insert". This will insert the entity for the character at the current cursor position. You might also like to double click the chosen entity instead. Replace special chars by its entity ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ To help make a XML/HTML document valid the plugin supports replacement of special chars known by the plugin. Both bulk replacement and immediate replacement during typing are supported. A few characters will not be replaced. These are * " * & * < * > * (` `) At typing time `````````````` You can activate/deactivate this feature using the *Tools->HTML Replacement->Auto-replace Special Characters* menu item. If it's activated, all special characters (beside the given exceptions from above) known by the plugin will be replaced by their entities. You could also set a keybinding for the plugin to toggle the status of this feature. Bulk replacement ```````````````` After inserting a huge amount of text, e.g. by using copy & paste, the plugin allows bulk replacement of all known characters (beside the mentioned exceptions). You can find the function under the same menu at *Tools->HTML Replacement->Replace Characters in Selection*, or configure a keybinding for the plugin. Save Actions ------------ Auto Save ^^^^^^^^^ This plugin provides an option to automatically save documents. You can choose to save the current document, or all of your documents, at a given delay. Save on focus out ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You can save the current document when the editor's focus goes out. Every pop-up, menu dialogs, or anything else that can make the editor lose the focus, will make the current document to be saved. Instant Save ^^^^^^^^^^^^ This plugin sets on every new file (*File->New* or *File->New (with template)*) a randomly chosen filename and set its filetype appropriate to the used template or when no template was used, to a configurable default filetype. This enables you to quickly compile, build and/or run the new file without the need to give it an explicit filename using the Save As dialog. This might be useful when you often create new files just for testing some code or something similar. Backup Copy ^^^^^^^^^^^ This plugin creates a backup copy of the current file in Geany when it is saved. You can specify the directory where the backup copy is saved and you can configure the automatically added extension in the configure dialog in Geany's plugin manager. After the plugin was loaded in Geany's plugin manager, every file is copied into the configured backup directory *after* the file has been saved in Geany. The created backup copy file permissions are set to read-write only for the user. This should help to not create world-readable files on possibly unsecure destination directories like /tmp (especially useful on multi-user systems). This applies only to non-Windows systems. On Windows, no explicit file permissions are set. Additionally, you can define how many levels of the original file's directory structure should be replicated in the backup copy path. For example, setting the option *Directory levels to include in the backup destination* to *2* cause the plugin to create the last two components of the original file's path in the backup copy path and place the new file there. Contributing to this document ============================= This document (``geany.txt``) is written in `reStructuredText`__ (or "reST"). The source file for it is located in Geany's ``doc`` subdirectory. If you intend on making changes, you should grab the source right from Git to make sure you've got the newest version. First, you need to configure the build system to generate the HTML documentation passing the *--enable-html-docs* option to the *configure* script. Then after editing the file, run ``make`` (from the root build directory or from the *doc* subdirectory) to build the HTML documentation and see how your changes look. This regenerates the ``geany.html`` file inside the *doc* subdirectory. To generate a PDF file, configure with *--enable-pdf-docs* and run ``make`` as for the HTML version. The generated PDF file is named geany-|(version)|.pdf and is located inside the *doc* subdirectory. __ https://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html After you are happy with your changes, create a patch e.g. by using:: % git diff geany.txt > foo.patch or even better, by creating a Git-formatted patch which will keep authoring and description data, by first committing your changes (doing so in a fresh new branch is recommended for `master` not to diverge from upstream) and then using git format-patch:: % git checkout -b my-documentation-changes # create a fresh branch % git commit geany.txt Write a good commit message... % git format-patch HEAD^ % git checkout master # go back to master and then submit that file to the mailing list for review. Also you can clone the Geany repository at GitHub and send a pull request. Note, you will need the Python docutils software package installed to build the docs. The package is named ``python-docutils`` on Debian and Fedora systems. Scintilla keyboard commands =========================== Copyright © 1998, 2006 Neil Hodgson This appendix is distributed under the terms of the License for Scintilla and SciTE. A copy of this license can be found in the file ``scintilla/License.txt`` included with the source code of this program and in the appendix of this document. See `License for Scintilla and SciTE`_. 20 June 2006 Keyboard commands ----------------- Keyboard commands for Scintilla mostly follow common Windows and GTK+ conventions. All move keys (arrows, page up/down, home and end) allows to extend or reduce the stream selection when holding the Shift key, and the rectangular selection when holding the appropriate keys (see `Column mode editing (rectangular selections)`_). Some keys may not be available with some national keyboards or because they are taken by the system such as by a window manager or GTK. Keyboard equivalents of menu commands are listed in the menus. Some less common commands with no menu equivalent are: ============================================= ====================== Action Shortcut key ============================================= ====================== Magnify text size. Ctrl-Keypad+ Reduce text size. Ctrl-Keypad- Restore text size to normal. Ctrl-Keypad/ Indent block. Tab Dedent block. Shift-Tab Delete to start of word. Ctrl-BackSpace Delete to end of word. Ctrl-Delete Delete to start of line. Ctrl-Shift-BackSpace Go to start of document. Ctrl-Home Extend selection to start of document. Ctrl-Shift-Home Go to start of display line. Alt-Home Extend selection to start of display line. Alt-Shift-Home Go to end of document. Ctrl-End Extend selection to end of document. Ctrl-Shift-End Extend selection to end of display line. Alt-Shift-End Previous paragraph. Shift extends selection. Ctrl-Up Next paragraph. Shift extends selection. Ctrl-Down Previous word. Shift extends selection. Ctrl-Left Next word. Shift extends selection. Ctrl-Right ============================================= ====================== Tips and tricks =============== Document notebook ----------------- * Double-click on empty space in the notebook tab bar to open a new document. * Middle-click on a document's notebook tab to close the document. * Hold `Ctrl` and click on any notebook tab to switch to the last used document. * Double-click on a document's notebook tab to toggle all additional widgets (to show them again use the View menu or the keyboard shortcut). The interface pref must be enabled for this to work. Editor ------ * Alt-scroll wheel moves up/down a page. * Ctrl-scroll wheel zooms in/out. * Shift-scroll wheel scrolls 8 characters right/left. * Ctrl-click on a word in a document to perform *Go to Symbol Definition*. * Ctrl-click on a bracket/brace to perform *Go to Matching Brace*. Interface --------- * Double-click on a symbol-list group to expand or compact it. GTK-related ----------- * Scrolling the mouse wheel over a notebook tab bar will switch notebook pages. The following are derived from X-Windows features (but GTK still supports them on Windows): * Middle-click pastes the last selected text. * Middle-click on a scrollbar moves the scrollbar to that position without having to drag it. Compile-time options ==================== There are some options which can only be changed at compile time, and some options which are used as the default for configurable options. To change these options, edit the appropriate source file in the ``src`` subdirectory. Look for a block of lines starting with ``#define GEANY_*``. Any definitions which are not listed here should not be changed. .. note:: Most users should not need to change these options. src/geany.h ----------- ============================== ============================================ ================== Option Description Default ============================== ============================================ ================== GEANY_STRING_UNTITLED A string used as the default name for new untitled files. Be aware that the string can be translated, so change it only if you know what you are doing. GEANY_WINDOW_MINIMAL_WIDTH The minimal width of the main window. 620 GEANY_WINDOW_MINIMAL_HEIGHT The minimal height of the main window. 440 GEANY_WINDOW_DEFAULT_WIDTH The default width of the main window at the 900 first start. GEANY_WINDOW_DEFAULT_HEIGHT The default height of the main window at the 600 first start. **Windows specific** GEANY_USE_WIN32_DIALOG Set this to 1 if you want to use the default 0 Windows file open and save dialogs instead GTK's file open and save dialogs. The default Windows file dialogs are missing some nice features like choosing a filetype or an encoding. *Do not touch this setting when building on a non-Win32 system.* ============================== ============================================ ================== project.h --------- ============================== ============================================ ================== Option Description Default ============================== ============================================ ================== GEANY_PROJECT_EXT The default filename extension for Geany geany project files. It is used when creating new projects and as filter mask for the project open dialog. ============================== ============================================ ================== filetypes.c ----------- ============================== ============================================ ================== Option Description Default ============================== ============================================ ================== GEANY_FILETYPE_SEARCH_LINES The number of lines to search for the 2 filetype with the extract filetype regex. ============================== ============================================ ================== editor.h -------- ============================== ============================================ ================== Option Description Default ============================== ============================================ ================== GEANY_WORDCHARS These characters define word boundaries when a string with: making selections and searching using word a-z, A-Z, 0-9 and matching options. underscore. ============================== ============================================ ================== keyfile.c --------- These are default settings that can be overridden in the `Preferences`_ dialog. ============================== ============================================ ================== Option Description Default ============================== ============================================ ================== GEANY_MIN_SYMBOLLIST_CHARS How many characters you need to type to 4 trigger the autocompletion list. GEANY_DISK_CHECK_TIMEOUT Time in seconds between checking a file for 30 external changes. GEANY_DEFAULT_TOOLS_MAKE The make tool. This can also include a path. "make" GEANY_DEFAULT_TOOLS_TERMINAL A terminal emulator command, see See below. `Terminal emulators`_. GEANY_DEFAULT_TOOLS_BROWSER A web browser. This can also include a path. "firefox" GEANY_DEFAULT_TOOLS_PRINTCMD A printing tool. It should be able to accept "lpr" and process plain text files. This can also include a path. GEANY_DEFAULT_TOOLS_GREP A grep tool. It should be compatible with "grep" GNU grep. This can also include a path. GEANY_DEFAULT_MRU_LENGTH The length of the "Recent files" list. 10 GEANY_DEFAULT_FONT_SYMBOL_LIST The font used in sidebar to show symbols and "Sans 9" open files. GEANY_DEFAULT_FONT_MSG_WINDOW The font used in the messages window. "Sans 9" GEANY_DEFAULT_FONT_EDITOR The font used in the editor window. "Monospace 10" GEANY_TOGGLE_MARK A string which is used to mark a toggled "~ " comment. GEANY_MAX_AUTOCOMPLETE_WORDS How many autocompletion suggestions should 30 Geany provide. GEANY_DEFAULT_FILETYPE_REGEX The default regex to extract filetypes from See below. files. ============================== ============================================ ================== .. _ft_regex: The GEANY_DEFAULT_FILETYPE_REGEX default value is -\\*-\\s*([^\\s]+)\\s*-\\*- which finds Emacs filetypes. The GEANY_DEFAULT_TOOLS_TERMINAL default value on Windows is:: cmd.exe /Q /C %c and on any non-Windows system is:: xterm -e "/bin/sh %c" build.c ------- ============================== ============================================ ================== Option Description Default ============================== ============================================ ================== GEANY_BUILD_ERR_HIGHLIGHT_MAX Amount of build error indicators to 50 be shown in the editor window. This affects the special coloring when Geany detects a compiler output line as an error message and then highlights the corresponding line in the source code. Usually only the first few messages are interesting because following errors are just after-effects. All errors in the Compiler window are parsed and unaffected by this value. PRINTBUILDCMDS Every time a build menu item priority FALSE calculation is run, print the state of the menu item table in the form of the table in `Build Menu Configuration`_. May be useful to debug configuration file overloading. Warning produces a lot of output. Can also be enabled/disabled by the debugger by setting printbuildcmds to 1/0 overriding the compile setting. ============================== ============================================ ================== GNU General Public License ========================== :: GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Version 2, June 1991 Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. Preamble The licenses for most software are designed to take away your freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free software--to make sure the software is free for all its users. This General Public License applies to most of the Free Software Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to using it. 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If the Program specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and "any later version", you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that version or of any later version published by the Free Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software Foundation. 10. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally. NO WARRANTY 11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION. 12. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms. To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found. Copyright (C) This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail. If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode: Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) year name of author Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'. This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions; type `show c' for details. The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; they could even be mouse-clicks or menu items--whatever suits your program. You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names: Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program `Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker. , 1 April 1989 Ty Coon, President of Vice This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General Public License instead of this License. License for Scintilla and SciTE =============================== Copyright 1998-2003 by Neil Hodgson All Rights Reserved Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation. NEIL HODGSON DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL NEIL HODGSON BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.