I'm currently thinking about switching from Pluma (former gEdit) to Sublime Text. What I have seen so far from Sublime Text is pretty nice.
I currently test Submlime Text 2 and would like it to execute make
in the folder of the document that is currently opened when I press Ctrl + M.
Is that possible? How do I do it?
When I currently hit Ctrl + M it does build the LaTeX document I currently view, but it does not use my Makefile
. That is bad, because it fails to build my main document which has a more complicated build process.
After setting Tools > Build System > Make
it runs make, but not the Makefile of the current documents folder.
I've found this, but it seems to focus on OS X.
This answer was almost what I needed:
Do the following steps to make Sublime Text 2 (ST2) execute
make
when you hit Ctrl + m under Linux (in my case: Linux Mint, a Debian based distribution):make
withwhich make
/home/[Your user name]/.config/sublime-text-2/Packages/User
Make (Linux).sublime-build
with the content from below.Tools > Build System > Make (Linux)
in ST2You might notice that ST2 has a different PATH than you have in your shell. See Sublime Text 2: custom PATH and PYTHONPATH.
Make (Linux).sublime-build
You might have to adjust
path
to your needs. I've simply put the content ofecho $PATH
in this field (which is much more than the simple example from below).