/* Upgrading to v2.2 */
There are a few things in the 2.2 release that require some care when upgrading.
The default theme is now included
in codemirror.css
, so
you do not have to included it separately anymore. (It was tiny, so
even if you're not using it, the extra data overhead is negligible.)
CodeMirror has moved to a system where keymaps are used to bind behavior to keys. This means custom bindings are now possible.
Three options that influenced key
behavior, tabMode
, enterMode
,
and smartHome
, are no longer supported. Instead, you can
provide custom bindings to influence the way these keys act. This is
done through the
new extraKeys
option, which can hold an object mapping key names to functionality. A
simple example would be:
extraKeys: { "Ctrl-S": function(instance) { saveText(instance.getValue()); }, "Ctrl-/": "undo" }
Keys can be mapped either to functions, which will be given the
editor instance as argument, or to strings, which are mapped through
functions through the CodeMirror.commands
table, which
contains all the built-in editing commands, and can be inspected and
extended by external code.
By default, the Home
key is bound to
the "goLineStartSmart"
command, which moves the cursor to
the first non-whitespace character on the line. You can set do this to
make it always go to the very start instead:
extraKeys: {"Home": "goLineStart"}
Similarly, Enter
is bound
to "newlineAndIndent"
by default. You can bind it to
something else to get different behavior. To disable special handling
completely and only get a newline character inserted, you can bind it
to false
:
extraKeys: {"Enter": false}
The same works for Tab
. If you don't want CodeMirror
to handle it, bind it to false
. The default behaviour is
to indent the current line more ("indentMore"
command),
and indent it less when shift is held ("indentLess"
).
There are also "indentAuto"
(smart indent)
and "insertTab"
commands provided for alternate
behaviors. Or you can write your own handler function to do something
different altogether.
Handling of tabs changed completely. The display width of tabs can
now be set with the tabSize
option, and tabs can
be styled by setting CSS rules
for the cm-tab
class.
The default width for tabs is now 4, as opposed to the 8 that is
hard-wired into browsers. If you are relying on 8-space tabs, make
sure you explicitly set tabSize: 8
in your options.