It seems like the new Xcode 4 does not apply the XCCodeSenseFormattingOptions
anymore. At least for me :(
Anyway, do you know how to put the opening brace to the new line for autocompletion in Xcode 4? I used to type this in terminal but it does not work for the new Xcode.
defaults write com.apple.Xcode XCCodeSenseFormattingOptions -dict BlockSeparator "\\n" PreMethodDeclSpacing ""
In Xcode 4.3.1, if you edit the following file as sudo from the terminal, as Scott Forbes described above, you can change where the opening brace appears. It would go away with new installations of Xcode, I would imagine, so I would vote that this is a bug with Apple too.
/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/PlugIns/IDECodeSnippetLibrary.ideplugin/Contents/Resources/SystemCodeSnippets.codesnippets
Leslie
Check out my modified (system wide) snippets for Xcode 4.2 here:
http://forrst.com/posts/Put_that_where_it_belongs_Xcode-PNL
It should take care of all the relevant opening curly braces for iOS development..
XCode 4 uses "code snippets" to do autocompletion, and ships with a built-in library of them: You can view the Code Snippet Library by clicking on the
{ }
icon in the Library Pane, which is probably on the lower right-hand side of your main XCode window.All of XCode 4's built-in code snippets put the opening brace on the same line as the statement – this is XCode 4's code snippet for an
if
statement, for example:So if you wanted XCode 4 to autocomplete like so:
...then you'd have to edit the code snippet accordingly. This, in turn, leads to two problems:
These problems are more challenging than the simple
defaults write
command that worked in XCode 3 – but it is possible, if you're determined and you can edit property lists, to delve into the guts of XCode 4 and change these code snippets one by one./Developer/Library/Xcode/PrivatePlugIns/IDECodeSnippetLibrary.ideplugin/Contents/Resources/SystemCodeSnippets.codesnippets
contains XCode 4's library of built-in code snippets. This probably goes without saying, but you should make a backup of this file before charging in and making edits – and afterwards you should make another backup, and set aside a copy of the file with your new and improved code snippets, because you'll almost certainly overwrite the contents of/Developer/Library/Xcode
when you install the next release of XCode 4. (It's also possible that Apple will change the format of this file, add new code snippets, or do any number of other things that could render this answer ineffective.)If you have Xcode 4.3 or later installed directly from the App Store, everything is inside the Xcode.app bundle. The path to SystemCodeSnippets.codesnippets is
/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/PlugIns/IDECodeSnippetLibrary.ideplugin/Contents/Resources/SystemCodeSnippets.codesnippets
.Anyhow, you'll find the above file contains several entries like this one:
This is the code snippet for autocompleting an
if
statement. Edit theIDECodeSnippetContents
to put the opening brace on a new line, save your work, and then restart XCode 4; if all goes well, you should be able to type anif
statement and see the results.You'll need to make at least half a dozen more edits to cover the most common autocompletes (
for
,while
, etc.), and if you want to be thorough it'll take somewhere around 40 separate edits. It's a lot of work, but if you really, really want XCode 4's autocompletion to put your opening braces on a separate line, it can be done.I used SnippetEdit for Xcode4 and it works amazingly. It basically lets you replace old snippets given by xcode with the new ones defined by yourself. See more here: https://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/43352/snippet-edit
Just make a user code snipped which overrides Apple's version. Do this by entering in the Completion Shortcut field the same name as in the default snipped. Look at this video for a howto: http://s3.amazonaws.com/screencasts.pragmaticstudio.com/017_custom_code_snippets.mov
There’s no way to do it in Xcode 4. Please do file a bug.