On OS X, Sublime Text has its PATH set by launchctl, not by your shell1. Commands like make
run by Sublime Text are then unable to find non-system binaries, including those installed by homebrew and MacPorts.
Fix Mac Path is a simple plugin for Sublime Text 2 and 3 which sets Sublime Text's PATH to that reported by your shell. Now, if you add homebrew's /usr/local/bin
directory to your PATH in .bash_profile (or whatever other way you set your shell's PATH,) Sublime Text will inherit that PATH.
1: This isn't true if you launch Sublime Text from within your shell (e.g., with the subl
command.)
Fix Mac Path is for Sublime Text 2 and 3 running on Mac OS X. (Other platforms don't suffer from the problem this plugin fixes, to my knowledge, so it isn't needed.)
The easiest way to get this is to use Package Control and search for "Fix Mac Path".
To manually install Fix Mac Path, run
git clone https://github.com/int3h/SublimeFixMacPath.git ~/Library/Application\ Support/Sublime\ Text\ 2/Packages/FixMacPath
for Sublime Text 2, or
git clone https://github.com/int3h/SublimeFixMacPath.git ~/Library/Application\ Support/Sublime\ Text\ 3/Packages/FixMacPath
for Sublime Text 3.
You can optionally set the following option to your user preferences:
-
"additional_path_items": []
An array of strings of locations you wish to add to Sublime Text's PATH, in addition to those pulled from your shell.
For example, to add
~/Desktop
and~/bin
to the shell's PATH in Sublime Text, you would use"additional_path_items": ["~/Desktop", "~/bin"]
.