@psnider,
It’s still here. You need a file with a .sublime-project suffix.
I do my work at the workspace level, so I have a bunch of git repositories or other projects which are checked into some sort of source control system (and so shared between users) and then at the same level as these folders I have a ‘master.sublime-project’ and a ‘master.sublime-workspace’
Here is a chopped-down version of my master.sublime-project.
Note that there is an excluded folders section and an excluded files section. They’re different.
{
"folders":
[
{
"path": ".",
"folder_exclude_patterns": [
// "head/settings", // I want to see my settings folder so this is commented out.
"head/dbmigrations", // I don't want to see dbmigrations folder so it's not commented.
"head/hello",
// Miscellaneous
"head/*.broken", // Any time I have valuable changes in a broken project I rename it to something.broken and check out fresh.
"head/documentation",
"head/shiro", // experimental shiro project.
// OTHER STUFF.
"akismet",
"node_modules",
"target*",
".grails",
"lib",
".metadata",
".plugin-meta",
"*.swp"
],
"file_exclude_patterns":[
"._*", // you need to specify this *again*
"*.bak",
"*.sample",
"*.tar",
"*.tgz",
"*.zip",
"*.sublime-workspace",
".gitignore",
".gitattributes",
".keystore",
".editorconfig",
".jshintrc",
"stacktrace.log",
"*.tmproj",
".classpath",
".project"
]
}
]
}