The idea of this plugin is generate a text file with some info about the current open folder or project. By some info I mean the total of files the folder has, the types of files and how much lines of code each type have. It doesn't read binary files, they are totally ignored by the plugin.
I know it is not the most useful information you can have about your project, but I is something cool to know. At least I think it is cool.
I hope you you find this plugin helpful.
You can install via Sublime Package Control plugin. Just open "Package Control: Install Package" in your Command Palette and search for "Not That Useless Project Report".
For manual installation, run the following script in the Sublime Text terminal (ctrl+`)
which utilizes git clone
.
import os; path=sublime.packages_path(); (os.makedirs(path) if not os.path.exists(path) else None); window.run_command('exec', {'cmd': ['git', 'clone', 'https://github.com/pererinha/NotThatUselessProjectReport', 'NotThatUselessProjectReport'], 'working_dir': path})
It is currently working just for Sublime 3
- On Mac Command + Shift + U
- On Windows or Linux Ctrl + Shift + U
Or
Ctrl + Shift + P and search for “Generate a not useless report about your project”
This is the report of this project
Project report
==============
Summary
-------
|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|
| Type | Files | Lines | Blank lines |
|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|
| JSON | 1 | 4 | 0 |
| PY | 4 | 279 | 52 |
| SUBLIME-COMMANDS | 1 | 6 | 0 |
| SUBLIME-KEYMAP | 3 | 9 | 0 |
| TXT | 2 | 11 | 4 |
|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|
Totals
------
|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|
| Types | Files | Lines | Blank lines |
|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|
| 5 | 11 | 309 | 56 |
|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|--------------------|
How cool is that??
Special thanks to @joshearl for his awesome book Writing Sublime Plugins and to Audrey Roy for binaryornot, it saved me a lot of time.