You need to define a content-type using the org.eclipse.core.contenttype extension point. Then you need to associate your editor with the particular content type (and not the file extension).
Next, you need to associate your project nature with the content type that you just defined.
You may also need to create a second content type that should be used for your files when outside of a project with the specific nature.
Here is an example that we used in Groovy-Eclipse so that *.groovy files would be opened with a groovy editor by default in groovy projects, but by a text editor outside of groovy projects:
<extension point="org.eclipse.core.contenttype.contentTypes">
<content-type
base-type="org.eclipse.jdt.core.javaSource"
file-extensions="groovy"
id="groovySource"
name="Groovy Source File (for Groovy projects)"
priority="high"/>
<content-type
base-type="org.eclipse.core.runtime.text"
file-extensions="groovy"
id="groovyText"
name="Groovy Text File (for non-Groovy projects)"
priority="low"/>
</extension>
<extension
id="groovyNature"
name="Groovy Nature"
point="org.eclipse.core.resources.natures">
<runtime>
<run class="org.codehaus.jdt.groovy.model.GroovyNature"/>
</runtime>
<requires-nature id="org.eclipse.jdt.core.javanature"/>
<content-type
id="org.eclipse.jdt.groovy.core.groovySource">
</content-type>
Here, we define groovySource for groovy projects and groovyText for non-groovy projects. Notice also, that the priority of the content-types are different.
And then, elsewhere, we associate the GroovyEditor with the groovySource content-type.