Important: This documentation applies to the SVN trunk of YASnippet, which you get here. Documentation for other versions can be found here.
You can use YASnippet to expand snippets in different ways:
When yas/minor-mode is enabled, the keybinding taken from yas/trigger-key will take effect.
yas/trigger-key invokes yas/expand, which tries to expand a snippet abbrev (also known as snippet key) before point.
The default key is "TAB", however, you can freely set it to some other key.
To enable the YASnippet minor mode in all buffers globally use the command yas/global-mode.
When you use yas/global-mode you can also selectively disable YASnippet in some buffers by setting the buffer-local variable yas/dont-active in the buffer's mode hook.
Trouble when using or understanding the yas/trigger-key is easily the most controversial issue in YASsnippet. See the FAQ.
yas/fallback-behaviour is a customization variable bound to 'call-other-command by default. If yas/expand failed to find any suitable snippet to expand, it will disable the minor mode temporarily and find if there's any other command bound the yas/trigger-key.
If found, the command will be called. Usually this works very well -- when there's a snippet, expand it, otherwise, call whatever command originally bind to the trigger key.
However, you can change this behavior by customizing the yas/fallback-behavior variable. If you set this variable to 'return-nil, it will return nil instead of trying to call the original command when no snippet is found.
The command M-x yas/insert-snippet lets you insert snippets at point for you current major mode. It prompts you for the snippet key first, and then for a snippet template if more than one template exists for the same key.
The list presented contains the snippets that can be inserted at point, according to the condition system. If you want to see all applicable snippets for the major mode, prefix this command with C-u.
The prompting methods used are again controlled by yas/prompt-functions.
See the section of the # binding: directive in Writing Snippets.
To integrate with hippie-expand, just put yas/hippie-try-expand in hippie-expand-try-functions-list. This probably makes more sense when placed at the top of the list, but it can be put anywhere you prefer.
Sometimes you might want to expand a snippet directly from you own elisp code. You should call yas/expand-snippet instead of yas/expand in this case.
As with expanding from the menubar, the condition system and multiple candidates doesn't affect expansion. In fact, expanding from the YASnippet menu has the same effect of evaluating the follow code:
(yas/expand-snippet template)
See the internal documentation on yas/expand-snippet for more information.
YASnippet does quite a bit of filtering to find out which snippets are eligible for expanding at the current cursor position.
In particular, the following things matter:
Currently loaded snippets tables
These are loaded from a directory hierarchy in your file system. See Organizing Snippets. They are named after major modes like html-mode, ruby-mode, etc...
Major mode of the current buffer
If the currrent major mode matches one of the loaded snippet tables, then all that table's snippets are considered for expansion. Use M-x describe-variable RET major-mode RET to find out which major mode you are in currently.
Parent tables
Snippet tables defined as the parent of some other eligible table are also considered. This works recursively, i.e. parents of parents of eligible tables are also considered.
Buffer-local yas/mode-symbol variable
This can be used to consider snippet tables whose name does not correspond to a major mode. If you set this variable to a name , like rinari-minor-mode, you can have some snippets expand only in that minor mode. Naturally, you want to set this conditionally, i.e. only when entering that minor mode, so using a hook is a good idea.
;; When entering rinari-minor-mode, consider also the snippets in the
;; snippet table "rails-mode"
(add-hook 'rinari-minor-mode-hook
#'(lambda ()
(setq yas/mode-symbol 'rails-mode)))
Buffer-local yas/buffer-local-condition variable
This variable provides finer grained control over what snippets can be expanded in the current buffer. The default value won't let you expand snippets inside comments or string literals for example. See The condition system for more info.
Consider this scenario: you are an old Emacs hacker. You like the abbrev-way and set yas/trigger-key to "SPC". However, you don't want if to be expanded as a snippet when you are typing in a comment block or a string (e.g. in python-mode).
If you use the # condition : directive (see Writing Snippets) you could just specify the condition for if to be (not (python-in-string/comment)). But how about while, for, etc. ? Writing the same condition for all the snippets is just boring. So has a buffer local variable yas/buffer-local-condition. You can set this variable to (not (python-in-string/comment)) in python-mode-hook.
Then, what if you really want some particular snippet to expand even inside a comment? This is also possible! But let's stop telling the story and look at the rules:
In the mentioned scenario, set yas/buffer-local-condition like this
(add-hook 'python-mode-hook
'(lambda ()
(setq yas/buffer-local-condition
'(if (python-in-string/comment)
'(require-snippet-condition . force-in-comment)
t))))
... and specify the condition for a snippet that you're going to expand in comment to be evaluated to the symbol force-in-comment. Then it can be expanded as you expected, while other snippets like if still can't expanded in comment.
The rules outlined above can return more than one snippet to be expanded at point.
When there are multiple candidates, YASnippet will let you select one. The UI for selecting multiple candidate can be customized through yas/prompt-functions , which defines your preferred methods of being prompted for snippets.
You can customize it with M-x customize-variable RET yas/prompt-functions RET. Alternatively you can put in your emacs-file:
(setq yas/prompt-functions '(yas/x-prompt yas/dropdown-prompt))
Currently there are some alternatives solution with YASnippet.
The function yas/x-prompt can be used to show a popup menu for you to select. This menu will be part of you native window system widget, which means:
You can use functions yas/completing-prompt for the classic emacs completion method or yas/ido-prompt for a much nicer looking method. The best way is to try it. This works in a terminal.
See below for the documentation on variable yas/prompt-functions
You can write a function and add it to the yas/prompt-functions list. These functions are called with the following arguments:
The return value of any function you put here should be one of the objects in CHOICES, properly formatted with DISPLAY-FN (if that is passed).
How to act when yas/expand does not expand a snippet.
return-nil means return nil. (i.e. do nothing)
An entry (apply COMMAND . ARGS) means interactively call COMMAND, if ARGS is non-nil, call COMMAND non-interactively with ARGS as arguments.
If non-nil, prompt for snippet key first, then for template.
Otherwise prompts for all possible snippet names.
This affects yas/insert-snippet and yas/visit-snippet-file.
If non-nil, and multiple eligible snippet tables, prompts user for tables first.
Otherwise, user chooses between the merging together of all eligible tables.
This affects yas/insert-snippet, yas/visit-snippet-file
The default searching strategy is quite powerful. For example, in c-mode, bar, foo_bar, "#foo_bar" can all be recognized as a snippet key. Furthermore, the searching is in that order. In other words, if bar is found to be a key to some valid snippet, then that snippet is expanded and replaces the bar. Snippets pointed to by foo_bar and "#foobar won't be considered.
However, this strategy can also be customized easily from the yas/key-syntaxes variable. It is a list of syntax rules, the default value is ("w" "w_" "w_." "^ "). Which means search the following thing until found one:
But you'd better keep the default value unless you want to understand how Emacs's syntax rules work...