There are at least three options:
- Switch syntax manually (not preferred, but easy; no explanation required)
- Add
"Gemfile" to the list of Ruby-syntax files
- Use the plugin you link to and create a package for it
1. No explanation, but handy trick
You can bind a keystroke to set syntax without moving to the mouse.
I bound syntax changing to Ctrl-Opt-Space by adding the following to my user keybindings:
[
{ "keys": ["ctrl+alt+space"],
"command": "show_overlay",
"args": { "overlay": "command_palette", "text": "Set Syntax: " } }
]
2. Add "Gemfile" to list of Ruby-syntax files
- Linux:
~/.config/sublime-text-2/Packages/Ruby/Ruby.tmLanguage
- OS X:
~/Library/Application Support/Sublime Text 2/Packages/Ruby/Ruby.tmLanguage
- Windows:
%APPDATA%/Sublime Text 2/Packages/Ruby/Ruby.tmLanguage
It'll be obvious once you're in the file. It's an <array> element with Ruby-looking filenames. Add <string>Gemfile</string> and you're all set.
It's possible the setting could get overwritten on an upgrade; I'm not sure how that works with ST2--it may be cleaner to do it through code as in the snippet.
3. Using the snippet you linked to
More work (and the correction of one syntax error). You can either do it manually, by creating a directory in Packages (see above for location) or create an actual package and allow ST2 to install it.
I created a test package called "Syntax" and copied the snippet into it, restarted ST2, and opening a Gemfile worked as expected. The correction required an additional colon (new gist), nutshell:
elif name[-3] == "erb": # Needed a semi-colon here.
set_sintax(view, "HTML (Rails)", "Rails")