I think it would be a very nice addition to the StackSnippets™ to have Emmet implemented in the editor.
This is NOT an HTML/CSS replacement, it's a productivity tool meant to help you write faster
For those of you who are unfamiliar, Emmet can turn CSS selectoresque strings such as section#main>header>ul>li*5>{Item $}
to full fledged HTML markup like
<section id="main">
<header>
<ul>
<li>Item 1</li>
<li>Item 2</li>
<li>Item 3</li>
<li>Item 4</li>
<li>Item 5</li>
</ul>
</header>
</section>
It also works for CSS, things like p0
to padding: 0;
, mt5p
to margin-top: 5%;
and t5
to top: 5px;
You type the line, press TAB and presto, insta-HTML in the editor. (In case you were thinking, the idea is to improve your typing time. p0TAB is faster to type than padding: 0;
For practical examples, try it out in jsFiddle
Pros
- AWESOME!!
- Very helpful in creating quick and dirty markup boilerplate.
- Relatively easy to implement (existing editor has an official plugin).
- No effect on existing workflow for users who don't know Emmet.
Cons
- Slightly larger JS file.
mt5
transforming tomargin-top: 5px
.div.container>span
opposed to<div class="container><span></span></div>"
. @SecondRikudo: argument against: How would the syntax highlighter / markdown know your "Emmet markdown" is emmet, and not JS? You would have to include some sort of identifier specifying "This line should be interpreted as Emmet".