jEdit looks for edit modes in two locations; the
modes
subdirectory of the jEdit settings directory, and
the modes
subdirectory of the jEdit install directory.
The location of the settings directory is system-specific; see the section called “The jEdit Settings Directory”.
Each mode directory contains a catalog
file. All
edit modes contained in that directory must be listed in the catalog,
otherwise they will not be available to jEdit.
Catalogs, like modes themselves, are written in XML. They consist of a
single MODES
tag, with a number of
MODE
tags inside. Each mode tag associates a mode name
with an XML file, and specifies the file name and first line pattern for the
mode. A sample mode catalog looks as follows:
<?xml version="1.0"?> <!DOCTYPE CATALOG SYSTEM "catalog.dtd"> <MODES> <MODE NAME="shellscript" FILE="shellscript.xml" FILE_NAME_GLOB="*.sh" FIRST_LINE_GLOB="#!/*sh*" /> </MODES>
In the above example, a mode named “shellscript” is
defined, and is used for files whose names end with
.sh
, or whose first line starts with “#!/”
and contains “sh”.
The MODE
tag supports the following
attributes:
NAME
- the name of the edit mode, as it
will appear in the dialog
box, the status bar, and so on.
FILE
- the name of the XML file containing
the mode definition.
FILE_NAME_GLOB
- files whose names match
this glob pattern will be opened in this edit mode.
FIRST_LINE_GLOB
- files whose first line
matches this glob pattern will be opened in this edit mode.
Glob pattern syntax is described in Appendix D, Glob Patterns.
If an edit mode in the user-specific catalog has the same name as an edit mode in the system catalog, the version in the user-specific catalog will override the system default.