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annotate runtime/doc/usr_41.txt @ 16970:db31eab2f32b
Added tag v8.1.1485 for changeset 8c794a694d669f43d048a0dc30f991b0e0a214ac
author | Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> |
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date | Thu, 06 Jun 2019 19:15:07 +0200 |
parents | e5dab34ded73 |
children | 1841c03a9b5e |
rev | line source |
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16871 | 1 *usr_41.txt* For Vim version 8.1. Last change: 2019 May 29 |
7 | 2 |
3 VIM USER MANUAL - by Bram Moolenaar | |
4 | |
5 Write a Vim script | |
6 | |
7 | |
8 The Vim script language is used for the startup vimrc file, syntax files, and | |
9 many other things. This chapter explains the items that can be used in a Vim | |
10 script. There are a lot of them, thus this is a long chapter. | |
11 | |
12 |41.1| Introduction | |
13 |41.2| Variables | |
14 |41.3| Expressions | |
15 |41.4| Conditionals | |
16 |41.5| Executing an expression | |
17 |41.6| Using functions | |
18 |41.7| Defining a function | |
161 | 19 |41.8| Lists and Dictionaries |
20 |41.9| Exceptions | |
21 |41.10| Various remarks | |
22 |41.11| Writing a plugin | |
23 |41.12| Writing a filetype plugin | |
24 |41.13| Writing a compiler plugin | |
170 | 25 |41.14| Writing a plugin that loads quickly |
26 |41.15| Writing library scripts | |
793 | 27 |41.16| Distributing Vim scripts |
7 | 28 |
29 Next chapter: |usr_42.txt| Add new menus | |
30 Previous chapter: |usr_40.txt| Make new commands | |
31 Table of contents: |usr_toc.txt| | |
32 | |
33 ============================================================================== | |
129 | 34 *41.1* Introduction *vim-script-intro* *script* |
7 | 35 |
36 Your first experience with Vim scripts is the vimrc file. Vim reads it when | |
37 it starts up and executes the commands. You can set options to values you | |
38 prefer. And you can use any colon command in it (commands that start with a | |
39 ":"; these are sometimes referred to as Ex commands or command-line commands). | |
40 Syntax files are also Vim scripts. As are files that set options for a | |
41 specific file type. A complicated macro can be defined by a separate Vim | |
42 script file. You can think of other uses yourself. | |
43 | |
44 Let's start with a simple example: > | |
45 | |
46 :let i = 1 | |
47 :while i < 5 | |
48 : echo "count is" i | |
161 | 49 : let i += 1 |
7 | 50 :endwhile |
51 < | |
52 Note: | |
53 The ":" characters are not really needed here. You only need to use | |
54 them when you type a command. In a Vim script file they can be left | |
55 out. We will use them here anyway to make clear these are colon | |
56 commands and make them stand out from Normal mode commands. | |
161 | 57 Note: |
58 You can try out the examples by yanking the lines from the text here | |
59 and executing them with :@" | |
60 | |
61 The output of the example code is: | |
62 | |
63 count is 1 ~ | |
64 count is 2 ~ | |
65 count is 3 ~ | |
66 count is 4 ~ | |
67 | |
68 In the first line the ":let" command assigns a value to a variable. The | |
69 generic form is: > | |
7 | 70 |
71 :let {variable} = {expression} | |
72 | |
73 In this case the variable name is "i" and the expression is a simple value, | |
74 the number one. | |
75 The ":while" command starts a loop. The generic form is: > | |
76 | |
77 :while {condition} | |
78 : {statements} | |
79 :endwhile | |
80 | |
81 The statements until the matching ":endwhile" are executed for as long as the | |
82 condition is true. The condition used here is the expression "i < 5". This | |
83 is true when the variable i is smaller than five. | |
84 Note: | |
85 If you happen to write a while loop that keeps on running, you can | |
86 interrupt it by pressing CTRL-C (CTRL-Break on MS-Windows). | |
161 | 87 |
88 The ":echo" command prints its arguments. In this case the string "count is" | |
89 and the value of the variable i. Since i is one, this will print: | |
90 | |
91 count is 1 ~ | |
92 | |
93 Then there is the ":let i += 1" command. This does the same thing as | |
94 ":let i = i + 1". This adds one to the variable i and assigns the new value | |
95 to the same variable. | |
96 | |
97 The example was given to explain the commands, but would you really want to | |
11062 | 98 make such a loop, it can be written much more compact: > |
112 | 99 |
100 :for i in range(1, 4) | |
101 : echo "count is" i | |
102 :endfor | |
103 | |
161 | 104 We won't explain how |:for| and |range()| work until later. Follow the links |
105 if you are impatient. | |
112 | 106 |
7 | 107 |
16871 | 108 FOUR KINDS OF NUMBERS |
109 | |
110 Numbers can be decimal, hexadecimal, octal or binary. A hexadecimal number | |
111 starts with "0x" or "0X". For example "0x1f" is decimal 31. An octal number | |
112 starts with a zero. "017" is decimal 15. A binary number starts with "0b" or | |
113 "0B". For example "0b101" is decimal 5. Careful: don't put a zero before a | |
114 decimal number, it will be interpreted as an octal number! | |
7 | 115 The ":echo" command always prints decimal numbers. Example: > |
116 | |
117 :echo 0x7f 036 | |
118 < 127 30 ~ | |
119 | |
16871 | 120 A number is made negative with a minus sign. This also works for hexadecimal, |
121 octal and binary numbers. A minus sign is also used for subtraction. Compare | |
122 this with the previous example: > | |
7 | 123 |
124 :echo 0x7f -036 | |
125 < 97 ~ | |
126 | |
127 White space in an expression is ignored. However, it's recommended to use it | |
128 for separating items, to make the expression easier to read. For example, to | |
161 | 129 avoid the confusion with a negative number above, put a space between the |
130 minus sign and the following number: > | |
7 | 131 |
132 :echo 0x7f - 036 | |
133 | |
134 ============================================================================== | |
135 *41.2* Variables | |
136 | |
137 A variable name consists of ASCII letters, digits and the underscore. It | |
138 cannot start with a digit. Valid variable names are: | |
139 | |
140 counter | |
141 _aap3 | |
142 very_long_variable_name_with_underscores | |
143 FuncLength | |
144 LENGTH | |
145 | |
146 Invalid names are "foo+bar" and "6var". | |
147 These variables are global. To see a list of currently defined variables | |
148 use this command: > | |
149 | |
150 :let | |
151 | |
152 You can use global variables everywhere. This also means that when the | |
153 variable "count" is used in one script file, it might also be used in another | |
154 file. This leads to confusion at least, and real problems at worst. To avoid | |
155 this, you can use a variable local to a script file by prepending "s:". For | |
156 example, one script contains this code: > | |
157 | |
158 :let s:count = 1 | |
159 :while s:count < 5 | |
160 : source other.vim | |
161 | 161 : let s:count += 1 |
7 | 162 :endwhile |
163 | |
164 Since "s:count" is local to this script, you can be sure that sourcing the | |
165 "other.vim" script will not change this variable. If "other.vim" also uses an | |
166 "s:count" variable, it will be a different copy, local to that script. More | |
167 about script-local variables here: |script-variable|. | |
168 | |
169 There are more kinds of variables, see |internal-variables|. The most often | |
170 used ones are: | |
171 | |
172 b:name variable local to a buffer | |
173 w:name variable local to a window | |
174 g:name global variable (also in a function) | |
175 v:name variable predefined by Vim | |
176 | |
177 | |
178 DELETING VARIABLES | |
179 | |
180 Variables take up memory and show up in the output of the ":let" command. To | |
181 delete a variable use the ":unlet" command. Example: > | |
182 | |
183 :unlet s:count | |
184 | |
185 This deletes the script-local variable "s:count" to free up the memory it | |
186 uses. If you are not sure if the variable exists, and don't want an error | |
187 message when it doesn't, append !: > | |
188 | |
189 :unlet! s:count | |
190 | |
191 When a script finishes, the local variables used there will not be | |
192 automatically freed. The next time the script executes, it can still use the | |
193 old value. Example: > | |
194 | |
195 :if !exists("s:call_count") | |
196 : let s:call_count = 0 | |
197 :endif | |
198 :let s:call_count = s:call_count + 1 | |
199 :echo "called" s:call_count "times" | |
200 | |
201 The "exists()" function checks if a variable has already been defined. Its | |
202 argument is the name of the variable you want to check. Not the variable | |
203 itself! If you would do this: > | |
204 | |
205 :if !exists(s:call_count) | |
206 | |
207 Then the value of s:call_count will be used as the name of the variable that | |
208 exists() checks. That's not what you want. | |
209 The exclamation mark ! negates a value. When the value was true, it | |
210 becomes false. When it was false, it becomes true. You can read it as "not". | |
211 Thus "if !exists()" can be read as "if not exists()". | |
161 | 212 What Vim calls true is anything that is not zero. Zero is false. |
856 | 213 Note: |
161 | 214 Vim automatically converts a string to a number when it is looking for |
215 a number. When using a string that doesn't start with a digit the | |
216 resulting number is zero. Thus look out for this: > | |
217 :if "true" | |
218 < The "true" will be interpreted as a zero, thus as false! | |
7 | 219 |
220 | |
221 STRING VARIABLES AND CONSTANTS | |
222 | |
223 So far only numbers were used for the variable value. Strings can be used as | |
161 | 224 well. Numbers and strings are the basic types of variables that Vim supports. |
225 The type is dynamic, it is set each time when assigning a value to the | |
226 variable with ":let". More about types in |41.8|. | |
7 | 227 To assign a string value to a variable, you need to use a string constant. |
228 There are two types of these. First the string in double quotes: > | |
229 | |
230 :let name = "peter" | |
231 :echo name | |
232 < peter ~ | |
233 | |
234 If you want to include a double quote inside the string, put a backslash in | |
235 front of it: > | |
236 | |
237 :let name = "\"peter\"" | |
238 :echo name | |
239 < "peter" ~ | |
240 | |
241 To avoid the need for a backslash, you can use a string in single quotes: > | |
242 | |
243 :let name = '"peter"' | |
244 :echo name | |
245 < "peter" ~ | |
246 | |
161 | 247 Inside a single-quote string all the characters are as they are. Only the |
248 single quote itself is special: you need to use two to get one. A backslash | |
249 is taken literally, thus you can't use it to change the meaning of the | |
7 | 250 character after it. |
251 In double-quote strings it is possible to use special characters. Here are | |
252 a few useful ones: | |
253 | |
254 \t <Tab> | |
255 \n <NL>, line break | |
256 \r <CR>, <Enter> | |
257 \e <Esc> | |
258 \b <BS>, backspace | |
259 \" " | |
260 \\ \, backslash | |
261 \<Esc> <Esc> | |
262 \<C-W> CTRL-W | |
263 | |
264 The last two are just examples. The "\<name>" form can be used to include | |
265 the special key "name". | |
266 See |expr-quote| for the full list of special items in a string. | |
267 | |
268 ============================================================================== | |
269 *41.3* Expressions | |
270 | |
271 Vim has a rich, yet simple way to handle expressions. You can read the | |
272 definition here: |expression-syntax|. Here we will show the most common | |
273 items. | |
274 The numbers, strings and variables mentioned above are expressions by | |
275 themselves. Thus everywhere an expression is expected, you can use a number, | |
276 string or variable. Other basic items in an expression are: | |
277 | |
278 $NAME environment variable | |
279 &name option | |
280 @r register | |
281 | |
282 Examples: > | |
283 | |
284 :echo "The value of 'tabstop' is" &ts | |
285 :echo "Your home directory is" $HOME | |
286 :if @a > 5 | |
287 | |
288 The &name form can be used to save an option value, set it to a new value, | |
289 do something and restore the old value. Example: > | |
290 | |
291 :let save_ic = &ic | |
292 :set noic | |
293 :/The Start/,$delete | |
294 :let &ic = save_ic | |
295 | |
296 This makes sure the "The Start" pattern is used with the 'ignorecase' option | |
161 | 297 off. Still, it keeps the value that the user had set. (Another way to do |
298 this would be to add "\C" to the pattern, see |/\C|.) | |
7 | 299 |
300 | |
301 MATHEMATICS | |
302 | |
303 It becomes more interesting if we combine these basic items. Let's start with | |
304 mathematics on numbers: | |
305 | |
306 a + b add | |
307 a - b subtract | |
308 a * b multiply | |
309 a / b divide | |
310 a % b modulo | |
311 | |
312 The usual precedence is used. Example: > | |
313 | |
314 :echo 10 + 5 * 2 | |
315 < 20 ~ | |
316 | |
2709 | 317 Grouping is done with parentheses. No surprises here. Example: > |
7 | 318 |
319 :echo (10 + 5) * 2 | |
320 < 30 ~ | |
321 | |
322 Strings can be concatenated with ".". Example: > | |
323 | |
324 :echo "foo" . "bar" | |
325 < foobar ~ | |
326 | |
327 When the ":echo" command gets multiple arguments, it separates them with a | |
328 space. In the example the argument is a single expression, thus no space is | |
329 inserted. | |
330 | |
331 Borrowed from the C language is the conditional expression: | |
332 | |
333 a ? b : c | |
334 | |
335 If "a" evaluates to true "b" is used, otherwise "c" is used. Example: > | |
336 | |
337 :let i = 4 | |
338 :echo i > 5 ? "i is big" : "i is small" | |
339 < i is small ~ | |
340 | |
341 The three parts of the constructs are always evaluated first, thus you could | |
342 see it work as: | |
343 | |
344 (a) ? (b) : (c) | |
345 | |
346 ============================================================================== | |
347 *41.4* Conditionals | |
348 | |
349 The ":if" commands executes the following statements, until the matching | |
350 ":endif", only when a condition is met. The generic form is: | |
351 | |
352 :if {condition} | |
353 {statements} | |
354 :endif | |
355 | |
356 Only when the expression {condition} evaluates to true (non-zero) will the | |
357 {statements} be executed. These must still be valid commands. If they | |
358 contain garbage, Vim won't be able to find the ":endif". | |
359 You can also use ":else". The generic form for this is: | |
360 | |
361 :if {condition} | |
362 {statements} | |
363 :else | |
364 {statements} | |
365 :endif | |
366 | |
367 The second {statements} is only executed if the first one isn't. | |
368 Finally, there is ":elseif": | |
369 | |
370 :if {condition} | |
371 {statements} | |
372 :elseif {condition} | |
373 {statements} | |
374 :endif | |
375 | |
376 This works just like using ":else" and then "if", but without the need for an | |
377 extra ":endif". | |
378 A useful example for your vimrc file is checking the 'term' option and | |
379 doing something depending upon its value: > | |
380 | |
381 :if &term == "xterm" | |
382 : " Do stuff for xterm | |
383 :elseif &term == "vt100" | |
384 : " Do stuff for a vt100 terminal | |
385 :else | |
386 : " Do something for other terminals | |
387 :endif | |
388 | |
389 | |
390 LOGIC OPERATIONS | |
391 | |
392 We already used some of them in the examples. These are the most often used | |
393 ones: | |
394 | |
395 a == b equal to | |
396 a != b not equal to | |
397 a > b greater than | |
398 a >= b greater than or equal to | |
399 a < b less than | |
400 a <= b less than or equal to | |
401 | |
402 The result is one if the condition is met and zero otherwise. An example: > | |
403 | |
161 | 404 :if v:version >= 700 |
7 | 405 : echo "congratulations" |
406 :else | |
407 : echo "you are using an old version, upgrade!" | |
408 :endif | |
409 | |
410 Here "v:version" is a variable defined by Vim, which has the value of the Vim | |
411 version. 600 is for version 6.0. Version 6.1 has the value 601. This is | |
412 very useful to write a script that works with multiple versions of Vim. | |
413 |v:version| | |
414 | |
415 The logic operators work both for numbers and strings. When comparing two | |
416 strings, the mathematical difference is used. This compares byte values, | |
417 which may not be right for some languages. | |
418 When comparing a string with a number, the string is first converted to a | |
419 number. This is a bit tricky, because when a string doesn't look like a | |
420 number, the number zero is used. Example: > | |
421 | |
422 :if 0 == "one" | |
423 : echo "yes" | |
424 :endif | |
425 | |
426 This will echo "yes", because "one" doesn't look like a number, thus it is | |
427 converted to the number zero. | |
428 | |
429 For strings there are two more items: | |
430 | |
431 a =~ b matches with | |
432 a !~ b does not match with | |
433 | |
434 The left item "a" is used as a string. The right item "b" is used as a | |
435 pattern, like what's used for searching. Example: > | |
436 | |
437 :if str =~ " " | |
438 : echo "str contains a space" | |
439 :endif | |
440 :if str !~ '\.$' | |
441 : echo "str does not end in a full stop" | |
442 :endif | |
443 | |
444 Notice the use of a single-quote string for the pattern. This is useful, | |
161 | 445 because backslashes would need to be doubled in a double-quote string and |
446 patterns tend to contain many backslashes. | |
7 | 447 |
448 The 'ignorecase' option is used when comparing strings. When you don't want | |
449 that, append "#" to match case and "?" to ignore case. Thus "==?" compares | |
450 two strings to be equal while ignoring case. And "!~#" checks if a pattern | |
451 doesn't match, also checking the case of letters. For the full table see | |
452 |expr-==|. | |
453 | |
454 | |
455 MORE LOOPING | |
456 | |
457 The ":while" command was already mentioned. Two more statements can be used | |
458 in between the ":while" and the ":endwhile": | |
459 | |
460 :continue Jump back to the start of the while loop; the | |
461 loop continues. | |
462 :break Jump forward to the ":endwhile"; the loop is | |
463 discontinued. | |
464 | |
465 Example: > | |
466 | |
467 :while counter < 40 | |
468 : call do_something() | |
469 : if skip_flag | |
470 : continue | |
471 : endif | |
472 : if finished_flag | |
473 : break | |
474 : endif | |
475 : sleep 50m | |
476 :endwhile | |
477 | |
478 The ":sleep" command makes Vim take a nap. The "50m" specifies fifty | |
479 milliseconds. Another example is ":sleep 4", which sleeps for four seconds. | |
480 | |
161 | 481 Even more looping can be done with the ":for" command, see below in |41.8|. |
482 | |
7 | 483 ============================================================================== |
484 *41.5* Executing an expression | |
485 | |
486 So far the commands in the script were executed by Vim directly. The | |
487 ":execute" command allows executing the result of an expression. This is a | |
488 very powerful way to build commands and execute them. | |
489 An example is to jump to a tag, which is contained in a variable: > | |
490 | |
491 :execute "tag " . tag_name | |
492 | |
493 The "." is used to concatenate the string "tag " with the value of variable | |
494 "tag_name". Suppose "tag_name" has the value "get_cmd", then the command that | |
495 will be executed is: > | |
496 | |
497 :tag get_cmd | |
498 | |
499 The ":execute" command can only execute colon commands. The ":normal" command | |
500 executes Normal mode commands. However, its argument is not an expression but | |
501 the literal command characters. Example: > | |
502 | |
503 :normal gg=G | |
504 | |
505 This jumps to the first line and formats all lines with the "=" operator. | |
506 To make ":normal" work with an expression, combine ":execute" with it. | |
507 Example: > | |
508 | |
509 :execute "normal " . normal_commands | |
510 | |
511 The variable "normal_commands" must contain the Normal mode commands. | |
512 Make sure that the argument for ":normal" is a complete command. Otherwise | |
513 Vim will run into the end of the argument and abort the command. For example, | |
514 if you start Insert mode, you must leave Insert mode as well. This works: > | |
515 | |
516 :execute "normal Inew text \<Esc>" | |
517 | |
518 This inserts "new text " in the current line. Notice the use of the special | |
519 key "\<Esc>". This avoids having to enter a real <Esc> character in your | |
520 script. | |
521 | |
161 | 522 If you don't want to execute a string but evaluate it to get its expression |
523 value, you can use the eval() function: > | |
524 | |
525 :let optname = "path" | |
526 :let optval = eval('&' . optname) | |
527 | |
528 A "&" character is prepended to "path", thus the argument to eval() is | |
529 "&path". The result will then be the value of the 'path' option. | |
530 The same thing can be done with: > | |
531 :exe 'let optval = &' . optname | |
532 | |
7 | 533 ============================================================================== |
534 *41.6* Using functions | |
535 | |
536 Vim defines many functions and provides a large amount of functionality that | |
537 way. A few examples will be given in this section. You can find the whole | |
538 list here: |functions|. | |
539 | |
540 A function is called with the ":call" command. The parameters are passed in | |
2709 | 541 between parentheses separated by commas. Example: > |
7 | 542 |
543 :call search("Date: ", "W") | |
544 | |
545 This calls the search() function, with arguments "Date: " and "W". The | |
546 search() function uses its first argument as a search pattern and the second | |
547 one as flags. The "W" flag means the search doesn't wrap around the end of | |
548 the file. | |
549 | |
550 A function can be called in an expression. Example: > | |
551 | |
552 :let line = getline(".") | |
553 :let repl = substitute(line, '\a', "*", "g") | |
554 :call setline(".", repl) | |
555 | |
161 | 556 The getline() function obtains a line from the current buffer. Its argument |
557 is a specification of the line number. In this case "." is used, which means | |
558 the line where the cursor is. | |
7 | 559 The substitute() function does something similar to the ":substitute" |
560 command. The first argument is the string on which to perform the | |
561 substitution. The second argument is the pattern, the third the replacement | |
562 string. Finally, the last arguments are the flags. | |
563 The setline() function sets the line, specified by the first argument, to a | |
564 new string, the second argument. In this example the line under the cursor is | |
565 replaced with the result of the substitute(). Thus the effect of the three | |
566 statements is equal to: > | |
567 | |
568 :substitute/\a/*/g | |
569 | |
570 Using the functions becomes more interesting when you do more work before and | |
571 after the substitute() call. | |
572 | |
573 | |
574 FUNCTIONS *function-list* | |
575 | |
576 There are many functions. We will mention them here, grouped by what they are | |
577 used for. You can find an alphabetical list here: |functions|. Use CTRL-] on | |
578 the function name to jump to detailed help on it. | |
579 | |
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Avoid use of the GTK mail_loop() so that the GtkFileChooser can be used.
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580 String manipulation: *string-functions* |
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581 nr2char() get a character by its number value |
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582 list2str() get a character string from a list of numbers |
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583 char2nr() get number value of a character |
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584 str2list() get list of numbers from a string |
1620 | 585 str2nr() convert a string to a Number |
586 str2float() convert a string to a Float | |
824 | 587 printf() format a string according to % items |
7 | 588 escape() escape characters in a string with a '\' |
1620 | 589 shellescape() escape a string for use with a shell command |
590 fnameescape() escape a file name for use with a Vim command | |
824 | 591 tr() translate characters from one set to another |
7 | 592 strtrans() translate a string to make it printable |
593 tolower() turn a string to lowercase | |
594 toupper() turn a string to uppercase | |
595 match() position where a pattern matches in a string | |
596 matchend() position where a pattern match ends in a string | |
597 matchstr() match of a pattern in a string | |
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598 matchstrpos() match and positions of a pattern in a string |
824 | 599 matchlist() like matchstr() and also return submatches |
7 | 600 stridx() first index of a short string in a long string |
601 strridx() last index of a short string in a long string | |
5618 | 602 strlen() length of a string in bytes |
603 strchars() length of a string in characters | |
604 strwidth() size of string when displayed | |
605 strdisplaywidth() size of string when displayed, deals with tabs | |
7 | 606 substitute() substitute a pattern match with a string |
2908 | 607 submatch() get a specific match in ":s" and substitute() |
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608 strpart() get part of a string using byte index |
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609 strcharpart() get part of a string using char index |
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610 strgetchar() get character from a string using char index |
7 | 611 expand() expand special keywords |
612 iconv() convert text from one encoding to another | |
824 | 613 byteidx() byte index of a character in a string |
5618 | 614 byteidxcomp() like byteidx() but count composing characters |
824 | 615 repeat() repeat a string multiple times |
616 eval() evaluate a string expression | |
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617 execute() execute an Ex command and get the output |
16871 | 618 win_execute() like execute() but in a specified window |
15068 | 619 trim() trim characters from a string |
7 | 620 |
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621 List manipulation: *list-functions* |
112 | 622 get() get an item without error for wrong index |
623 len() number of items in a List | |
624 empty() check if List is empty | |
625 insert() insert an item somewhere in a List | |
626 add() append an item to a List | |
627 extend() append a List to a List | |
628 remove() remove one or more items from a List | |
629 copy() make a shallow copy of a List | |
630 deepcopy() make a full copy of a List | |
631 filter() remove selected items from a List | |
632 map() change each List item | |
633 sort() sort a List | |
634 reverse() reverse the order of a List | |
5763 | 635 uniq() remove copies of repeated adjacent items |
112 | 636 split() split a String into a List |
637 join() join List items into a String | |
824 | 638 range() return a List with a sequence of numbers |
112 | 639 string() String representation of a List |
640 call() call a function with List as arguments | |
323 | 641 index() index of a value in a List |
112 | 642 max() maximum value in a List |
643 min() minimum value in a List | |
644 count() count number of times a value appears in a List | |
824 | 645 repeat() repeat a List multiple times |
112 | 646 |
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647 Dictionary manipulation: *dict-functions* |
323 | 648 get() get an entry without an error for a wrong key |
112 | 649 len() number of entries in a Dictionary |
650 has_key() check whether a key appears in a Dictionary | |
651 empty() check if Dictionary is empty | |
652 remove() remove an entry from a Dictionary | |
653 extend() add entries from one Dictionary to another | |
654 filter() remove selected entries from a Dictionary | |
655 map() change each Dictionary entry | |
656 keys() get List of Dictionary keys | |
657 values() get List of Dictionary values | |
658 items() get List of Dictionary key-value pairs | |
659 copy() make a shallow copy of a Dictionary | |
660 deepcopy() make a full copy of a Dictionary | |
661 string() String representation of a Dictionary | |
662 max() maximum value in a Dictionary | |
663 min() minimum value in a Dictionary | |
664 count() count number of times a value appears | |
665 | |
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666 Floating point computation: *float-functions* |
1620 | 667 float2nr() convert Float to Number |
668 abs() absolute value (also works for Number) | |
669 round() round off | |
670 ceil() round up | |
671 floor() round down | |
672 trunc() remove value after decimal point | |
5618 | 673 fmod() remainder of division |
674 exp() exponential | |
675 log() natural logarithm (logarithm to base e) | |
1620 | 676 log10() logarithm to base 10 |
677 pow() value of x to the exponent y | |
678 sqrt() square root | |
679 sin() sine | |
680 cos() cosine | |
2725 | 681 tan() tangent |
682 asin() arc sine | |
683 acos() arc cosine | |
1620 | 684 atan() arc tangent |
2725 | 685 atan2() arc tangent |
686 sinh() hyperbolic sine | |
687 cosh() hyperbolic cosine | |
688 tanh() hyperbolic tangent | |
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689 isnan() check for not a number |
1620 | 690 |
3237 | 691 Other computation: *bitwise-function* |
692 and() bitwise AND | |
693 invert() bitwise invert | |
694 or() bitwise OR | |
695 xor() bitwise XOR | |
5618 | 696 sha256() SHA-256 hash |
3237 | 697 |
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698 Variables: *var-functions* |
824 | 699 type() type of a variable |
700 islocked() check if a variable is locked | |
11062 | 701 funcref() get a Funcref for a function reference |
824 | 702 function() get a Funcref for a function name |
703 getbufvar() get a variable value from a specific buffer | |
704 setbufvar() set a variable in a specific buffer | |
831 | 705 getwinvar() get a variable from specific window |
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706 gettabvar() get a variable from specific tab page |
831 | 707 gettabwinvar() get a variable from specific window & tab page |
824 | 708 setwinvar() set a variable in a specific window |
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709 settabvar() set a variable in a specific tab page |
831 | 710 settabwinvar() set a variable in a specific window & tab page |
824 | 711 garbagecollect() possibly free memory |
712 | |
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713 Cursor and mark position: *cursor-functions* *mark-functions* |
7 | 714 col() column number of the cursor or a mark |
715 virtcol() screen column of the cursor or a mark | |
716 line() line number of the cursor or mark | |
717 wincol() window column number of the cursor | |
718 winline() window line number of the cursor | |
719 cursor() position the cursor at a line/column | |
5618 | 720 screencol() get screen column of the cursor |
721 screenrow() get screen row of the cursor | |
5968 | 722 getcurpos() get position of the cursor |
824 | 723 getpos() get position of cursor, mark, etc. |
724 setpos() set position of cursor, mark, etc. | |
725 byte2line() get line number at a specific byte count | |
726 line2byte() byte count at a specific line | |
727 diff_filler() get the number of filler lines above a line | |
5618 | 728 screenattr() get attribute at a screen line/row |
729 screenchar() get character code at a screen line/row | |
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730 screenchars() get character codes at a screen line/row |
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731 screenstring() get string of characters at a screen line/row |
824 | 732 |
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733 Working with text in the current buffer: *text-functions* |
161 | 734 getline() get a line or list of lines from the buffer |
7 | 735 setline() replace a line in the buffer |
161 | 736 append() append line or list of lines in the buffer |
7 | 737 indent() indent of a specific line |
738 cindent() indent according to C indenting | |
739 lispindent() indent according to Lisp indenting | |
740 nextnonblank() find next non-blank line | |
741 prevnonblank() find previous non-blank line | |
742 search() find a match for a pattern | |
667 | 743 searchpos() find a match for a pattern |
7 | 744 searchpair() find the other end of a start/skip/end |
667 | 745 searchpairpos() find the other end of a start/skip/end |
824 | 746 searchdecl() search for the declaration of a name |
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747 getcharsearch() return character search information |
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748 setcharsearch() set character search information |
7 | 749 |
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750 *system-functions* *file-functions* |
7 | 751 System functions and manipulation of files: |
752 glob() expand wildcards | |
753 globpath() expand wildcards in a number of directories | |
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754 glob2regpat() convert a glob pattern into a search pattern |
824 | 755 findfile() find a file in a list of directories |
756 finddir() find a directory in a list of directories | |
7 | 757 resolve() find out where a shortcut points to |
758 fnamemodify() modify a file name | |
824 | 759 pathshorten() shorten directory names in a path |
760 simplify() simplify a path without changing its meaning | |
7 | 761 executable() check if an executable program exists |
5814 | 762 exepath() full path of an executable program |
7 | 763 filereadable() check if a file can be read |
764 filewritable() check if a file can be written to | |
824 | 765 getfperm() get the permissions of a file |
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766 setfperm() set the permissions of a file |
824 | 767 getftype() get the kind of a file |
7 | 768 isdirectory() check if a directory exists |
769 getfsize() get the size of a file | |
824 | 770 getcwd() get the current working directory |
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771 haslocaldir() check if current window used |:lcd| or |:tcd| |
7 | 772 tempname() get the name of a temporary file |
824 | 773 mkdir() create a new directory |
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774 chdir() change current working directory |
7 | 775 delete() delete a file |
776 rename() rename a file | |
5814 | 777 system() get the result of a shell command as a string |
778 systemlist() get the result of a shell command as a list | |
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779 environ() get all environment variables |
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780 getenv() get one environment variable |
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781 setenv() set an environment variable |
7 | 782 hostname() name of the system |
158 | 783 readfile() read a file into a List of lines |
16267 | 784 readdir() get a List of file names in a directory |
15729 | 785 writefile() write a List of lines or Blob into a file |
7 | 786 |
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787 Date and Time: *date-functions* *time-functions* |
824 | 788 getftime() get last modification time of a file |
789 localtime() get current time in seconds | |
790 strftime() convert time to a string | |
791 reltime() get the current or elapsed time accurately | |
792 reltimestr() convert reltime() result to a string | |
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793 reltimefloat() convert reltime() result to a Float |
824 | 794 |
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795 *buffer-functions* *window-functions* *arg-functions* |
7 | 796 Buffers, windows and the argument list: |
797 argc() number of entries in the argument list | |
798 argidx() current position in the argument list | |
5942 | 799 arglistid() get id of the argument list |
7 | 800 argv() get one entry from the argument list |
801 bufexists() check if a buffer exists | |
802 buflisted() check if a buffer exists and is listed | |
803 bufloaded() check if a buffer exists and is loaded | |
804 bufname() get the name of a specific buffer | |
805 bufnr() get the buffer number of a specific buffer | |
824 | 806 tabpagebuflist() return List of buffers in a tab page |
807 tabpagenr() get the number of a tab page | |
808 tabpagewinnr() like winnr() for a specified tab page | |
7 | 809 winnr() get the window number for the current window |
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810 bufwinid() get the window ID of a specific buffer |
7 | 811 bufwinnr() get the window number of a specific buffer |
812 winbufnr() get the buffer number of a specific window | |
434 | 813 getbufline() get a list of lines from the specified buffer |
15068 | 814 setbufline() replace a line in the specified buffer |
815 appendbufline() append a list of lines in the specified buffer | |
816 deletebufline() delete lines from a specified buffer | |
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817 listener_add() add a callback to listen to changes |
16808 | 818 listener_flush() invoke listener callbacks |
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819 listener_remove() remove a listener callback |
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820 win_findbuf() find windows containing a buffer |
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821 win_getid() get window ID of a window |
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822 win_gotoid() go to window with ID |
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823 win_id2tabwin() get tab and window nr from window ID |
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824 win_id2win() get window nr from window ID |
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825 getbufinfo() get a list with buffer information |
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826 gettabinfo() get a list with tab page information |
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827 getwininfo() get a list with window information |
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828 getchangelist() get a list of change list entries |
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829 getjumplist() get a list of jump list entries |
14637 | 830 swapinfo() information about a swap file |
15068 | 831 swapname() get the swap file path of a buffer |
824 | 832 |
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833 Command line: *command-line-functions* |
824 | 834 getcmdline() get the current command line |
835 getcmdpos() get position of the cursor in the command line | |
836 setcmdpos() set position of the cursor in the command line | |
837 getcmdtype() return the current command-line type | |
6153 | 838 getcmdwintype() return the current command-line window type |
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839 getcompletion() list of command-line completion matches |
824 | 840 |
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841 Quickfix and location lists: *quickfix-functions* |
824 | 842 getqflist() list of quickfix errors |
843 setqflist() modify a quickfix list | |
844 getloclist() list of location list items | |
845 setloclist() modify a location list | |
846 | |
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847 Insert mode completion: *completion-functions* |
824 | 848 complete() set found matches |
849 complete_add() add to found matches | |
850 complete_check() check if completion should be aborted | |
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851 complete_info() get current completion information |
824 | 852 pumvisible() check if the popup menu is displayed |
7 | 853 |
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854 Folding: *folding-functions* |
7 | 855 foldclosed() check for a closed fold at a specific line |
856 foldclosedend() like foldclosed() but return the last line | |
857 foldlevel() check for the fold level at a specific line | |
858 foldtext() generate the line displayed for a closed fold | |
824 | 859 foldtextresult() get the text displayed for a closed fold |
860 | |
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861 Syntax and highlighting: *syntax-functions* *highlighting-functions* |
1326 | 862 clearmatches() clear all matches defined by |matchadd()| and |
863 the |:match| commands | |
864 getmatches() get all matches defined by |matchadd()| and | |
865 the |:match| commands | |
7 | 866 hlexists() check if a highlight group exists |
867 hlID() get ID of a highlight group | |
868 synID() get syntax ID at a specific position | |
869 synIDattr() get a specific attribute of a syntax ID | |
870 synIDtrans() get translated syntax ID | |
2642 | 871 synstack() get list of syntax IDs at a specific position |
2662 | 872 synconcealed() get info about concealing |
824 | 873 diff_hlID() get highlight ID for diff mode at a position |
1326 | 874 matchadd() define a pattern to highlight (a "match") |
5979 | 875 matchaddpos() define a list of positions to highlight |
824 | 876 matcharg() get info about |:match| arguments |
1326 | 877 matchdelete() delete a match defined by |matchadd()| or a |
878 |:match| command | |
879 setmatches() restore a list of matches saved by | |
880 |getmatches()| | |
824 | 881 |
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882 Spelling: *spell-functions* |
824 | 883 spellbadword() locate badly spelled word at or after cursor |
884 spellsuggest() return suggested spelling corrections | |
885 soundfold() return the sound-a-like equivalent of a word | |
7 | 886 |
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887 History: *history-functions* |
7 | 888 histadd() add an item to a history |
889 histdel() delete an item from a history | |
890 histget() get an item from a history | |
891 histnr() get highest index of a history list | |
892 | |
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893 Interactive: *interactive-functions* |
824 | 894 browse() put up a file requester |
895 browsedir() put up a directory requester | |
7 | 896 confirm() let the user make a choice |
897 getchar() get a character from the user | |
898 getcharmod() get modifiers for the last typed character | |
1620 | 899 feedkeys() put characters in the typeahead queue |
7 | 900 input() get a line from the user |
824 | 901 inputlist() let the user pick an entry from a list |
7 | 902 inputsecret() get a line from the user without showing it |
903 inputdialog() get a line from the user in a dialog | |
230 | 904 inputsave() save and clear typeahead |
7 | 905 inputrestore() restore typeahead |
906 | |
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907 GUI: *gui-functions* |
824 | 908 getfontname() get name of current font being used |
13437 | 909 getwinpos() position of the Vim window |
910 getwinposx() X position of the Vim window | |
911 getwinposy() Y position of the Vim window | |
11062 | 912 balloon_show() set the balloon content |
12909 | 913 balloon_split() split a message for a balloon |
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914 balloon_gettext() get the text in the balloon |
824 | 915 |
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916 Vim server: *server-functions* |
7 | 917 serverlist() return the list of server names |
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918 remote_startserver() run a server |
7 | 919 remote_send() send command characters to a Vim server |
920 remote_expr() evaluate an expression in a Vim server | |
921 server2client() send a reply to a client of a Vim server | |
922 remote_peek() check if there is a reply from a Vim server | |
923 remote_read() read a reply from a Vim server | |
924 foreground() move the Vim window to the foreground | |
925 remote_foreground() move the Vim server window to the foreground | |
926 | |
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927 Window size and position: *window-size-functions* |
824 | 928 winheight() get height of a specific window |
929 winwidth() get width of a specific window | |
13051 | 930 win_screenpos() get screen position of a window |
15068 | 931 winlayout() get layout of windows in a tab page |
824 | 932 winrestcmd() return command to restore window sizes |
933 winsaveview() get view of current window | |
934 winrestview() restore saved view of current window | |
935 | |
4159 | 936 Mappings: *mapping-functions* |
937 hasmapto() check if a mapping exists | |
938 mapcheck() check if a matching mapping exists | |
939 maparg() get rhs of a mapping | |
940 wildmenumode() check if the wildmode is active | |
941 | |
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942 Testing: *test-functions* |
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943 assert_equal() assert that two expressions values are equal |
15068 | 944 assert_equalfile() assert that two file contents are equal |
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945 assert_notequal() assert that two expressions values are not equal |
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946 assert_inrange() assert that an expression is inside a range |
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947 assert_match() assert that a pattern matches the value |
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948 assert_notmatch() assert that a pattern does not match the value |
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949 assert_false() assert that an expression is false |
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950 assert_true() assert that an expression is true |
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951 assert_exception() assert that a command throws an exception |
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952 assert_beeps() assert that a command beeps |
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953 assert_fails() assert that a command fails |
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954 assert_report() report a test failure |
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955 test_alloc_fail() make memory allocation fail |
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956 test_autochdir() enable 'autochdir' during startup |
11160 | 957 test_override() test with Vim internal overrides |
958 test_garbagecollect_now() free memory right now | |
16808 | 959 test_getvalue() get value of an internal variable |
11062 | 960 test_ignore_error() ignore a specific error message |
15729 | 961 test_null_blob() return a null Blob |
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962 test_null_channel() return a null Channel |
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963 test_null_dict() return a null Dict |
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964 test_null_job() return a null Job |
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965 test_null_list() return a null List |
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966 test_null_partial() return a null Partial function |
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967 test_null_string() return a null String |
11062 | 968 test_settime() set the time Vim uses internally |
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969 test_setmouse() set the mouse position |
15068 | 970 test_feedinput() add key sequence to input buffer |
971 test_option_not_set() reset flag indicating option was set | |
972 test_scrollbar() simulate scrollbar movement in the GUI | |
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973 |
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974 Inter-process communication: *channel-functions* |
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975 ch_canread() check if there is something to read |
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976 ch_open() open a channel |
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977 ch_close() close a channel |
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978 ch_close_in() close the in part of a channel |
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979 ch_read() read a message from a channel |
15512 | 980 ch_readblob() read a Blob from a channel |
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981 ch_readraw() read a raw message from a channel |
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982 ch_sendexpr() send a JSON message over a channel |
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983 ch_sendraw() send a raw message over a channel |
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984 ch_evalexpr() evaluates an expression over channel |
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985 ch_evalraw() evaluates a raw string over channel |
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986 ch_status() get status of a channel |
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987 ch_getbufnr() get the buffer number of a channel |
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988 ch_getjob() get the job associated with a channel |
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989 ch_info() get channel information |
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990 ch_log() write a message in the channel log file |
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991 ch_logfile() set the channel log file |
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992 ch_setoptions() set the options for a channel |
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993 json_encode() encode an expression to a JSON string |
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994 json_decode() decode a JSON string to Vim types |
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995 js_encode() encode an expression to a JSON string |
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996 js_decode() decode a JSON string to Vim types |
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997 |
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998 Jobs: *job-functions* |
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999 job_start() start a job |
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1000 job_stop() stop a job |
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1001 job_status() get the status of a job |
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1002 job_getchannel() get the channel used by a job |
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1003 job_info() get information about a job |
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1004 job_setoptions() set options for a job |
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1005 |
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1006 Signs: *sign-functions* |
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1007 sign_define() define or update a sign |
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1008 sign_getdefined() get a list of defined signs |
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1009 sign_getplaced() get a list of placed signs |
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1010 sign_jump() jump to a sign |
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1011 sign_place() place a sign |
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1012 sign_undefine() undefine a sign |
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1013 sign_unplace() unplace a sign |
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1014 |
12254 | 1015 Terminal window: *terminal-functions* |
1016 term_start() open a terminal window and run a job | |
1017 term_list() get the list of terminal buffers | |
1018 term_sendkeys() send keystrokes to a terminal | |
1019 term_wait() wait for screen to be updated | |
1020 term_getjob() get the job associated with a terminal | |
1021 term_scrape() get row of a terminal screen | |
1022 term_getline() get a line of text from a terminal | |
1023 term_getattr() get the value of attribute {what} | |
1024 term_getcursor() get the cursor position of a terminal | |
1025 term_getscrolled() get the scroll count of a terminal | |
1026 term_getaltscreen() get the alternate screen flag | |
1027 term_getsize() get the size of a terminal | |
1028 term_getstatus() get the status of a terminal | |
1029 term_gettitle() get the title of a terminal | |
1030 term_gettty() get the tty name of a terminal | |
13735 | 1031 term_setansicolors() set 16 ANSI colors, used for GUI |
1032 term_getansicolors() get 16 ANSI colors, used for GUI | |
15068 | 1033 term_dumpdiff() display difference between two screen dumps |
1034 term_dumpload() load a terminal screen dump in a window | |
1035 term_dumpwrite() dump contents of a terminal screen to a file | |
1036 term_setkill() set signal to stop job in a terminal | |
1037 term_setrestore() set command to restore a terminal | |
1038 term_setsize() set the size of a terminal | |
12254 | 1039 |
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1040 Timers: *timer-functions* |
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1041 timer_start() create a timer |
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1042 timer_pause() pause or unpause a timer |
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1043 timer_stop() stop a timer |
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1044 timer_stopall() stop all timers |
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1045 timer_info() get information about timers |
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1046 |
15068 | 1047 Tags: *tag-functions* |
1048 taglist() get list of matching tags | |
1049 tagfiles() get a list of tags files | |
1050 gettagstack() get the tag stack of a window | |
1051 settagstack() modify the tag stack of a window | |
1052 | |
1053 Prompt Buffer: *promptbuffer-functions* | |
1054 prompt_setcallback() set prompt callback for a buffer | |
1055 prompt_setinterrupt() set interrupt callback for a buffer | |
1056 prompt_setprompt() set the prompt text for a buffer | |
1057 | |
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1058 Various: *various-functions* |
7 | 1059 mode() get current editing mode |
1060 visualmode() last visual mode used | |
1061 exists() check if a variable, function, etc. exists | |
1062 has() check if a feature is supported in Vim | |
824 | 1063 changenr() return number of most recent change |
7 | 1064 cscope_connection() check if a cscope connection exists |
1065 did_filetype() check if a FileType autocommand was used | |
1066 eventhandler() check if invoked by an event handler | |
1620 | 1067 getpid() get process ID of Vim |
824 | 1068 |
7 | 1069 libcall() call a function in an external library |
1070 libcallnr() idem, returning a number | |
824 | 1071 |
5618 | 1072 undofile() get the name of the undo file |
1073 undotree() return the state of the undo tree | |
1074 | |
7 | 1075 getreg() get contents of a register |
1076 getregtype() get type of a register | |
1077 setreg() set contents and type of a register | |
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1078 reg_executing() return the name of the register being executed |
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1079 reg_recording() return the name of the register being recorded |
824 | 1080 |
5618 | 1081 shiftwidth() effective value of 'shiftwidth' |
1082 | |
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1083 wordcount() get byte/word/char count of buffer |
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1084 |
5618 | 1085 luaeval() evaluate Lua expression |
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1086 mzeval() evaluate |MzScheme| expression |
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1087 perleval() evaluate Perl expression (|+perl|) |
5618 | 1088 py3eval() evaluate Python expression (|+python3|) |
1089 pyeval() evaluate Python expression (|+python|) | |
10734 | 1090 pyxeval() evaluate |python_x| expression |
15194 | 1091 debugbreak() interrupt a program being debugged |
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1092 |
7 | 1093 ============================================================================== |
1094 *41.7* Defining a function | |
1095 | |
1096 Vim enables you to define your own functions. The basic function declaration | |
1097 begins as follows: > | |
1098 | |
1099 :function {name}({var1}, {var2}, ...) | |
1100 : {body} | |
1101 :endfunction | |
1102 < | |
1103 Note: | |
1104 Function names must begin with a capital letter. | |
1105 | |
1106 Let's define a short function to return the smaller of two numbers. It starts | |
1107 with this line: > | |
1108 | |
1109 :function Min(num1, num2) | |
1110 | |
1111 This tells Vim that the function is named "Min" and it takes two arguments: | |
1112 "num1" and "num2". | |
1113 The first thing you need to do is to check to see which number is smaller: | |
1114 > | |
1115 : if a:num1 < a:num2 | |
1116 | |
1117 The special prefix "a:" tells Vim that the variable is a function argument. | |
1118 Let's assign the variable "smaller" the value of the smallest number: > | |
1119 | |
1120 : if a:num1 < a:num2 | |
1121 : let smaller = a:num1 | |
1122 : else | |
1123 : let smaller = a:num2 | |
1124 : endif | |
1125 | |
1126 The variable "smaller" is a local variable. Variables used inside a function | |
1127 are local unless prefixed by something like "g:", "a:", or "s:". | |
1128 | |
1129 Note: | |
1130 To access a global variable from inside a function you must prepend | |
1620 | 1131 "g:" to it. Thus "g:today" inside a function is used for the global |
1132 variable "today", and "today" is another variable, local to the | |
7 | 1133 function. |
1134 | |
1135 You now use the ":return" statement to return the smallest number to the user. | |
1136 Finally, you end the function: > | |
1137 | |
1138 : return smaller | |
1139 :endfunction | |
1140 | |
1141 The complete function definition is as follows: > | |
1142 | |
1143 :function Min(num1, num2) | |
1144 : if a:num1 < a:num2 | |
1145 : let smaller = a:num1 | |
1146 : else | |
1147 : let smaller = a:num2 | |
1148 : endif | |
1149 : return smaller | |
1150 :endfunction | |
1151 | |
161 | 1152 For people who like short functions, this does the same thing: > |
1153 | |
1154 :function Min(num1, num2) | |
1155 : if a:num1 < a:num2 | |
1156 : return a:num1 | |
1157 : endif | |
1158 : return a:num2 | |
1159 :endfunction | |
1160 | |
681 | 1161 A user defined function is called in exactly the same way as a built-in |
7 | 1162 function. Only the name is different. The Min function can be used like |
1163 this: > | |
1164 | |
1165 :echo Min(5, 8) | |
1166 | |
1167 Only now will the function be executed and the lines be interpreted by Vim. | |
1168 If there are mistakes, like using an undefined variable or function, you will | |
1169 now get an error message. When defining the function these errors are not | |
1170 detected. | |
1171 | |
1172 When a function reaches ":endfunction" or ":return" is used without an | |
1173 argument, the function returns zero. | |
1174 | |
1175 To redefine a function that already exists, use the ! for the ":function" | |
1176 command: > | |
1177 | |
1178 :function! Min(num1, num2, num3) | |
1179 | |
1180 | |
1181 USING A RANGE | |
1182 | |
1183 The ":call" command can be given a line range. This can have one of two | |
1184 meanings. When a function has been defined with the "range" keyword, it will | |
1185 take care of the line range itself. | |
1186 The function will be passed the variables "a:firstline" and "a:lastline". | |
1187 These will have the line numbers from the range the function was called with. | |
1188 Example: > | |
1189 | |
1190 :function Count_words() range | |
1620 | 1191 : let lnum = a:firstline |
1192 : let n = 0 | |
1193 : while lnum <= a:lastline | |
1194 : let n = n + len(split(getline(lnum))) | |
1195 : let lnum = lnum + 1 | |
7 | 1196 : endwhile |
1620 | 1197 : echo "found " . n . " words" |
7 | 1198 :endfunction |
1199 | |
1200 You can call this function with: > | |
1201 | |
1202 :10,30call Count_words() | |
1203 | |
1204 It will be executed once and echo the number of words. | |
1205 The other way to use a line range is by defining a function without the | |
1206 "range" keyword. The function will be called once for every line in the | |
1207 range, with the cursor in that line. Example: > | |
1208 | |
1209 :function Number() | |
1210 : echo "line " . line(".") . " contains: " . getline(".") | |
1211 :endfunction | |
1212 | |
1213 If you call this function with: > | |
1214 | |
1215 :10,15call Number() | |
1216 | |
1217 The function will be called six times. | |
1218 | |
1219 | |
1220 VARIABLE NUMBER OF ARGUMENTS | |
1221 | |
1222 Vim enables you to define functions that have a variable number of arguments. | |
1223 The following command, for instance, defines a function that must have 1 | |
1224 argument (start) and can have up to 20 additional arguments: > | |
1225 | |
1226 :function Show(start, ...) | |
1227 | |
1228 The variable "a:1" contains the first optional argument, "a:2" the second, and | |
1229 so on. The variable "a:0" contains the number of extra arguments. | |
1230 For example: > | |
1231 | |
1232 :function Show(start, ...) | |
1233 : echohl Title | |
2709 | 1234 : echo "start is " . a:start |
7 | 1235 : echohl None |
1236 : let index = 1 | |
1237 : while index <= a:0 | |
1238 : echo " Arg " . index . " is " . a:{index} | |
1239 : let index = index + 1 | |
1240 : endwhile | |
1241 : echo "" | |
1242 :endfunction | |
1243 | |
1244 This uses the ":echohl" command to specify the highlighting used for the | |
1245 following ":echo" command. ":echohl None" stops it again. The ":echon" | |
1246 command works like ":echo", but doesn't output a line break. | |
1247 | |
161 | 1248 You can also use the a:000 variable, it is a List of all the "..." arguments. |
1249 See |a:000|. | |
1250 | |
7 | 1251 |
1252 LISTING FUNCTIONS | |
1253 | |
1254 The ":function" command lists the names and arguments of all user-defined | |
1255 functions: > | |
1256 | |
1257 :function | |
1258 < function Show(start, ...) ~ | |
1259 function GetVimIndent() ~ | |
1260 function SetSyn(name) ~ | |
1261 | |
1262 To see what a function does, use its name as an argument for ":function": > | |
1263 | |
1264 :function SetSyn | |
1265 < 1 if &syntax == '' ~ | |
1266 2 let &syntax = a:name ~ | |
1267 3 endif ~ | |
1268 endfunction ~ | |
1269 | |
1270 | |
1271 DEBUGGING | |
1272 | |
1273 The line number is useful for when you get an error message or when debugging. | |
1274 See |debug-scripts| about debugging mode. | |
1275 You can also set the 'verbose' option to 12 or higher to see all function | |
1276 calls. Set it to 15 or higher to see every executed line. | |
1277 | |
1278 | |
1279 DELETING A FUNCTION | |
1280 | |
1281 To delete the Show() function: > | |
1282 | |
1283 :delfunction Show | |
1284 | |
1285 You get an error when the function doesn't exist. | |
1286 | |
161 | 1287 |
1288 FUNCTION REFERENCES | |
1289 | |
1290 Sometimes it can be useful to have a variable point to one function or | |
1291 another. You can do it with the function() function. It turns the name of a | |
1292 function into a reference: > | |
1293 | |
1294 :let result = 0 " or 1 | |
1295 :function! Right() | |
1296 : return 'Right!' | |
1297 :endfunc | |
1298 :function! Wrong() | |
1299 : return 'Wrong!' | |
1300 :endfunc | |
1301 : | |
1302 :if result == 1 | |
1303 : let Afunc = function('Right') | |
1304 :else | |
1305 : let Afunc = function('Wrong') | |
1306 :endif | |
1307 :echo call(Afunc, []) | |
1308 < Wrong! ~ | |
1309 | |
1310 Note that the name of a variable that holds a function reference must start | |
1311 with a capital. Otherwise it could be confused with the name of a builtin | |
1312 function. | |
1313 The way to invoke a function that a variable refers to is with the call() | |
1314 function. Its first argument is the function reference, the second argument | |
1315 is a List with arguments. | |
1316 | |
1317 Function references are most useful in combination with a Dictionary, as is | |
1318 explained in the next section. | |
1319 | |
7 | 1320 ============================================================================== |
161 | 1321 *41.8* Lists and Dictionaries |
1322 | |
1323 So far we have used the basic types String and Number. Vim also supports two | |
1324 composite types: List and Dictionary. | |
1325 | |
1326 A List is an ordered sequence of things. The things can be any kind of value, | |
1327 thus you can make a List of numbers, a List of Lists and even a List of mixed | |
1328 items. To create a List with three strings: > | |
1329 | |
856 | 1330 :let alist = ['aap', 'mies', 'noot'] |
161 | 1331 |
1332 The List items are enclosed in square brackets and separated by commas. To | |
1333 create an empty List: > | |
1334 | |
856 | 1335 :let alist = [] |
161 | 1336 |
1337 You can add items to a List with the add() function: > | |
1338 | |
856 | 1339 :let alist = [] |
161 | 1340 :call add(alist, 'foo') |
1341 :call add(alist, 'bar') | |
1342 :echo alist | |
1343 < ['foo', 'bar'] ~ | |
1344 | |
1345 List concatenation is done with +: > | |
1346 | |
1347 :echo alist + ['foo', 'bar'] | |
1348 < ['foo', 'bar', 'foo', 'bar'] ~ | |
1349 | |
1350 Or, if you want to extend a List directly: > | |
1351 | |
856 | 1352 :let alist = ['one'] |
161 | 1353 :call extend(alist, ['two', 'three']) |
1354 :echo alist | |
1355 < ['one', 'two', 'three'] ~ | |
1356 | |
1357 Notice that using add() will have a different effect: > | |
1358 | |
856 | 1359 :let alist = ['one'] |
161 | 1360 :call add(alist, ['two', 'three']) |
1361 :echo alist | |
1362 < ['one', ['two', 'three']] ~ | |
1363 | |
1364 The second argument of add() is added as a single item. | |
1365 | |
1366 | |
1367 FOR LOOP | |
1368 | |
1369 One of the nice things you can do with a List is iterate over it: > | |
1370 | |
1371 :let alist = ['one', 'two', 'three'] | |
1372 :for n in alist | |
1373 : echo n | |
1374 :endfor | |
1375 < one ~ | |
1376 two ~ | |
1377 three ~ | |
1378 | |
1379 This will loop over each element in List "alist", assigning the value to | |
1380 variable "n". The generic form of a for loop is: > | |
1381 | |
1382 :for {varname} in {listexpression} | |
1383 : {commands} | |
1384 :endfor | |
1385 | |
1386 To loop a certain number of times you need a List of a specific length. The | |
1387 range() function creates one for you: > | |
1388 | |
1389 :for a in range(3) | |
1390 : echo a | |
1391 :endfor | |
1392 < 0 ~ | |
1393 1 ~ | |
1394 2 ~ | |
1395 | |
1396 Notice that the first item of the List that range() produces is zero, thus the | |
1397 last item is one less than the length of the list. | |
1398 You can also specify the maximum value, the stride and even go backwards: > | |
1399 | |
1400 :for a in range(8, 4, -2) | |
1401 : echo a | |
1402 :endfor | |
1403 < 8 ~ | |
1404 6 ~ | |
1405 4 ~ | |
1406 | |
1407 A more useful example, looping over lines in the buffer: > | |
1408 | |
856 | 1409 :for line in getline(1, 20) |
1410 : if line =~ "Date: " | |
1411 : echo matchstr(line, 'Date: \zs.*') | |
1412 : endif | |
1413 :endfor | |
161 | 1414 |
1415 This looks into lines 1 to 20 (inclusive) and echoes any date found in there. | |
1416 | |
1417 | |
1418 DICTIONARIES | |
1419 | |
1420 A Dictionary stores key-value pairs. You can quickly lookup a value if you | |
1421 know the key. A Dictionary is created with curly braces: > | |
856 | 1422 |
161 | 1423 :let uk2nl = {'one': 'een', 'two': 'twee', 'three': 'drie'} |
1424 | |
164 | 1425 Now you can lookup words by putting the key in square brackets: > |
161 | 1426 |
1427 :echo uk2nl['two'] | |
1428 < twee ~ | |
1429 | |
1430 The generic form for defining a Dictionary is: > | |
1431 | |
1432 {<key> : <value>, ...} | |
1433 | |
1434 An empty Dictionary is one without any keys: > | |
1435 | |
1436 {} | |
1437 | |
1438 The possibilities with Dictionaries are numerous. There are various functions | |
1439 for them as well. For example, you can obtain a list of the keys and loop | |
1440 over them: > | |
1441 | |
1442 :for key in keys(uk2nl) | |
1443 : echo key | |
1444 :endfor | |
1445 < three ~ | |
1446 one ~ | |
1447 two ~ | |
1448 | |
1620 | 1449 You will notice the keys are not ordered. You can sort the list to get a |
161 | 1450 specific order: > |
1451 | |
1452 :for key in sort(keys(uk2nl)) | |
1453 : echo key | |
1454 :endfor | |
1455 < one ~ | |
1456 three ~ | |
1457 two ~ | |
1458 | |
1459 But you can never get back the order in which items are defined. For that you | |
1460 need to use a List, it stores items in an ordered sequence. | |
1461 | |
1462 | |
1463 DICTIONARY FUNCTIONS | |
1464 | |
1465 The items in a Dictionary can normally be obtained with an index in square | |
1466 brackets: > | |
1467 | |
1468 :echo uk2nl['one'] | |
1469 < een ~ | |
1470 | |
1471 A method that does the same, but without so many punctuation characters: > | |
1472 | |
1473 :echo uk2nl.one | |
1474 < een ~ | |
1475 | |
1476 This only works for a key that is made of ASCII letters, digits and the | |
1477 underscore. You can also assign a new value this way: > | |
1478 | |
1479 :let uk2nl.four = 'vier' | |
1480 :echo uk2nl | |
1481 < {'three': 'drie', 'four': 'vier', 'one': 'een', 'two': 'twee'} ~ | |
1482 | |
1483 And now for something special: you can directly define a function and store a | |
1484 reference to it in the dictionary: > | |
1485 | |
1486 :function uk2nl.translate(line) dict | |
1487 : return join(map(split(a:line), 'get(self, v:val, "???")')) | |
1488 :endfunction | |
1489 | |
1490 Let's first try it out: > | |
1491 | |
1492 :echo uk2nl.translate('three two five one') | |
1493 < drie twee ??? een ~ | |
1494 | |
1495 The first special thing you notice is the "dict" at the end of the ":function" | |
1496 line. This marks the function as being used from a Dictionary. The "self" | |
1497 local variable will then refer to that Dictionary. | |
1498 Now let's break up the complicated return command: > | |
1499 | |
1500 split(a:line) | |
1501 | |
2709 | 1502 The split() function takes a string, chops it into whitespace separated words |
161 | 1503 and returns a list with these words. Thus in the example it returns: > |
1504 | |
1505 :echo split('three two five one') | |
1506 < ['three', 'two', 'five', 'one'] ~ | |
1507 | |
1508 This list is the first argument to the map() function. This will go through | |
1509 the list, evaluating its second argument with "v:val" set to the value of each | |
1510 item. This is a shortcut to using a for loop. This command: > | |
1511 | |
1512 :let alist = map(split(a:line), 'get(self, v:val, "???")') | |
1513 | |
1514 Is equivalent to: > | |
1515 | |
1516 :let alist = split(a:line) | |
1517 :for idx in range(len(alist)) | |
1518 : let alist[idx] = get(self, alist[idx], "???") | |
1519 :endfor | |
1520 | |
1521 The get() function checks if a key is present in a Dictionary. If it is, then | |
1522 the value is retrieved. If it isn't, then the default value is returned, in | |
164 | 1523 the example it's '???'. This is a convenient way to handle situations where a |
161 | 1524 key may not be present and you don't want an error message. |
1525 | |
1526 The join() function does the opposite of split(): it joins together a list of | |
1527 words, putting a space in between. | |
1528 This combination of split(), map() and join() is a nice way to filter a line | |
1529 of words in a very compact way. | |
1530 | |
1531 | |
1532 OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING | |
1533 | |
1534 Now that you can put both values and functions in a Dictionary, you can | |
1535 actually use a Dictionary like an object. | |
1536 Above we used a Dictionary for translating Dutch to English. We might want | |
1537 to do the same for other languages. Let's first make an object (aka | |
1538 Dictionary) that has the translate function, but no words to translate: > | |
1539 | |
1540 :let transdict = {} | |
1541 :function transdict.translate(line) dict | |
1542 : return join(map(split(a:line), 'get(self.words, v:val, "???")')) | |
1543 :endfunction | |
1544 | |
1545 It's slightly different from the function above, using 'self.words' to lookup | |
1546 word translations. But we don't have a self.words. Thus you could call this | |
1547 an abstract class. | |
1548 | |
1549 Now we can instantiate a Dutch translation object: > | |
1550 | |
1551 :let uk2nl = copy(transdict) | |
1552 :let uk2nl.words = {'one': 'een', 'two': 'twee', 'three': 'drie'} | |
1553 :echo uk2nl.translate('three one') | |
1554 < drie een ~ | |
1555 | |
1556 And a German translator: > | |
1557 | |
1558 :let uk2de = copy(transdict) | |
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1559 :let uk2de.words = {'one': 'eins', 'two': 'zwei', 'three': 'drei'} |
161 | 1560 :echo uk2de.translate('three one') |
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diff
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|
1561 < drei eins ~ |
161 | 1562 |
1563 You see that the copy() function is used to make a copy of the "transdict" | |
1564 Dictionary and then the copy is changed to add the words. The original | |
1565 remains the same, of course. | |
1566 | |
1567 Now you can go one step further, and use your preferred translator: > | |
1568 | |
1569 :if $LANG =~ "de" | |
1570 : let trans = uk2de | |
1571 :else | |
1572 : let trans = uk2nl | |
1573 :endif | |
1574 :echo trans.translate('one two three') | |
1575 < een twee drie ~ | |
1576 | |
1577 Here "trans" refers to one of the two objects (Dictionaries). No copy is | |
1578 made. More about List and Dictionary identity can be found at |list-identity| | |
1579 and |dict-identity|. | |
1580 | |
1581 Now you might use a language that isn't supported. You can overrule the | |
1582 translate() function to do nothing: > | |
1583 | |
1584 :let uk2uk = copy(transdict) | |
1585 :function! uk2uk.translate(line) | |
1586 : return a:line | |
1587 :endfunction | |
1588 :echo uk2uk.translate('three one wladiwostok') | |
1589 < three one wladiwostok ~ | |
1590 | |
1591 Notice that a ! was used to overwrite the existing function reference. Now | |
1592 use "uk2uk" when no recognized language is found: > | |
1593 | |
1594 :if $LANG =~ "de" | |
1595 : let trans = uk2de | |
1596 :elseif $LANG =~ "nl" | |
1597 : let trans = uk2nl | |
1598 :else | |
1599 : let trans = uk2uk | |
1600 :endif | |
1601 :echo trans.translate('one two three') | |
1602 < one two three ~ | |
1603 | |
1604 For further reading see |Lists| and |Dictionaries|. | |
1605 | |
1606 ============================================================================== | |
1607 *41.9* Exceptions | |
7 | 1608 |
1609 Let's start with an example: > | |
1610 | |
1611 :try | |
1612 : read ~/templates/pascal.tmpl | |
1613 :catch /E484:/ | |
1614 : echo "Sorry, the Pascal template file cannot be found." | |
1615 :endtry | |
1616 | |
1617 The ":read" command will fail if the file does not exist. Instead of | |
1618 generating an error message, this code catches the error and gives the user a | |
2709 | 1619 nice message. |
7 | 1620 |
1621 For the commands in between ":try" and ":endtry" errors are turned into | |
1622 exceptions. An exception is a string. In the case of an error the string | |
1623 contains the error message. And every error message has a number. In this | |
1624 case, the error we catch contains "E484:". This number is guaranteed to stay | |
1625 the same (the text may change, e.g., it may be translated). | |
1626 | |
1627 When the ":read" command causes another error, the pattern "E484:" will not | |
1628 match in it. Thus this exception will not be caught and result in the usual | |
1629 error message. | |
1630 | |
1631 You might be tempted to do this: > | |
1632 | |
1633 :try | |
1634 : read ~/templates/pascal.tmpl | |
1635 :catch | |
1636 : echo "Sorry, the Pascal template file cannot be found." | |
1637 :endtry | |
1638 | |
1639 This means all errors are caught. But then you will not see errors that are | |
1640 useful, such as "E21: Cannot make changes, 'modifiable' is off". | |
1641 | |
1642 Another useful mechanism is the ":finally" command: > | |
1643 | |
1644 :let tmp = tempname() | |
1645 :try | |
1646 : exe ".,$write " . tmp | |
1647 : exe "!filter " . tmp | |
1648 : .,$delete | |
1649 : exe "$read " . tmp | |
1650 :finally | |
1651 : call delete(tmp) | |
1652 :endtry | |
1653 | |
1654 This filters the lines from the cursor until the end of the file through the | |
1655 "filter" command, which takes a file name argument. No matter if the | |
1656 filtering works, something goes wrong in between ":try" and ":finally" or the | |
1657 user cancels the filtering by pressing CTRL-C, the "call delete(tmp)" is | |
1658 always executed. This makes sure you don't leave the temporary file behind. | |
1659 | |
1660 More information about exception handling can be found in the reference | |
1661 manual: |exception-handling|. | |
1662 | |
1663 ============================================================================== | |
161 | 1664 *41.10* Various remarks |
7 | 1665 |
1666 Here is a summary of items that apply to Vim scripts. They are also mentioned | |
1667 elsewhere, but form a nice checklist. | |
1668 | |
1669 The end-of-line character depends on the system. For Unix a single <NL> | |
1670 character is used. For MS-DOS, Windows, OS/2 and the like, <CR><LF> is used. | |
1671 This is important when using mappings that end in a <CR>. See |:source_crnl|. | |
1672 | |
1673 | |
1674 WHITE SPACE | |
1675 | |
1676 Blank lines are allowed and ignored. | |
1677 | |
1678 Leading whitespace characters (blanks and TABs) are always ignored. The | |
11062 | 1679 whitespaces between parameters (e.g. between the "set" and the "cpoptions" in |
7 | 1680 the example below) are reduced to one blank character and plays the role of a |
1681 separator, the whitespaces after the last (visible) character may or may not | |
1682 be ignored depending on the situation, see below. | |
1683 | |
1684 For a ":set" command involving the "=" (equal) sign, such as in: > | |
1685 | |
1686 :set cpoptions =aABceFst | |
1687 | |
1688 the whitespace immediately before the "=" sign is ignored. But there can be | |
1689 no whitespace after the "=" sign! | |
1690 | |
1691 To include a whitespace character in the value of an option, it must be | |
1692 escaped by a "\" (backslash) as in the following example: > | |
1693 | |
1694 :set tags=my\ nice\ file | |
1695 | |
2709 | 1696 The same example written as: > |
7 | 1697 |
1698 :set tags=my nice file | |
1699 | |
1700 will issue an error, because it is interpreted as: > | |
1701 | |
1702 :set tags=my | |
1703 :set nice | |
1704 :set file | |
1705 | |
1706 | |
1707 COMMENTS | |
1708 | |
1709 The character " (the double quote mark) starts a comment. Everything after | |
1710 and including this character until the end-of-line is considered a comment and | |
1711 is ignored, except for commands that don't consider comments, as shown in | |
1712 examples below. A comment can start on any character position on the line. | |
1713 | |
1714 There is a little "catch" with comments for some commands. Examples: > | |
1715 | |
1716 :abbrev dev development " shorthand | |
1717 :map <F3> o#include " insert include | |
1718 :execute cmd " do it | |
1719 :!ls *.c " list C files | |
1720 | |
1721 The abbreviation 'dev' will be expanded to 'development " shorthand'. The | |
1722 mapping of <F3> will actually be the whole line after the 'o# ....' including | |
1723 the '" insert include'. The "execute" command will give an error. The "!" | |
1724 command will send everything after it to the shell, causing an error for an | |
1725 unmatched '"' character. | |
1726 There can be no comment after ":map", ":abbreviate", ":execute" and "!" | |
1727 commands (there are a few more commands with this restriction). For the | |
1728 ":map", ":abbreviate" and ":execute" commands there is a trick: > | |
1729 | |
1730 :abbrev dev development|" shorthand | |
1731 :map <F3> o#include|" insert include | |
1732 :execute cmd |" do it | |
1733 | |
1734 With the '|' character the command is separated from the next one. And that | |
1146 | 1735 next command is only a comment. For the last command you need to do two |
1736 things: |:execute| and use '|': > | |
1737 :exe '!ls *.c' |" list C files | |
7 | 1738 |
1739 Notice that there is no white space before the '|' in the abbreviation and | |
1740 mapping. For these commands, any character until the end-of-line or '|' is | |
1741 included. As a consequence of this behavior, you don't always see that | |
1742 trailing whitespace is included: > | |
1743 | |
1744 :map <F4> o#include | |
1745 | |
1146 | 1746 To spot these problems, you can set the 'list' option when editing vimrc |
7 | 1747 files. |
1748 | |
1146 | 1749 For Unix there is one special way to comment a line, that allows making a Vim |
1750 script executable: > | |
1751 #!/usr/bin/env vim -S | |
1752 echo "this is a Vim script" | |
1753 quit | |
1754 | |
1755 The "#" command by itself lists a line with the line number. Adding an | |
1756 exclamation mark changes it into doing nothing, so that you can add the shell | |
1757 command to execute the rest of the file. |:#!| |-S| | |
1758 | |
7 | 1759 |
1760 PITFALLS | |
1761 | |
1762 Even bigger problem arises in the following example: > | |
1763 | |
1764 :map ,ab o#include | |
1765 :unmap ,ab | |
1766 | |
1767 Here the unmap command will not work, because it tries to unmap ",ab ". This | |
1768 does not exist as a mapped sequence. An error will be issued, which is very | |
1769 hard to identify, because the ending whitespace character in ":unmap ,ab " is | |
1770 not visible. | |
1771 | |
1772 And this is the same as what happens when one uses a comment after an 'unmap' | |
1773 command: > | |
1774 | |
1775 :unmap ,ab " comment | |
1776 | |
1777 Here the comment part will be ignored. However, Vim will try to unmap | |
1778 ',ab ', which does not exist. Rewrite it as: > | |
1779 | |
1780 :unmap ,ab| " comment | |
1781 | |
1782 | |
1783 RESTORING THE VIEW | |
1784 | |
3893 | 1785 Sometimes you want to make a change and go back to where the cursor was. |
7 | 1786 Restoring the relative position would also be nice, so that the same line |
1787 appears at the top of the window. | |
1788 This example yanks the current line, puts it above the first line in the | |
1789 file and then restores the view: > | |
1790 | |
1791 map ,p ma"aYHmbgg"aP`bzt`a | |
1792 | |
1793 What this does: > | |
1794 ma"aYHmbgg"aP`bzt`a | |
1795 < ma set mark a at cursor position | |
1796 "aY yank current line into register a | |
1797 Hmb go to top line in window and set mark b there | |
1798 gg go to first line in file | |
1799 "aP put the yanked line above it | |
1800 `b go back to top line in display | |
1801 zt position the text in the window as before | |
1802 `a go back to saved cursor position | |
1803 | |
1804 | |
1805 PACKAGING | |
1806 | |
1807 To avoid your function names to interfere with functions that you get from | |
1808 others, use this scheme: | |
1809 - Prepend a unique string before each function name. I often use an | |
1810 abbreviation. For example, "OW_" is used for the option window functions. | |
1811 - Put the definition of your functions together in a file. Set a global | |
1812 variable to indicate that the functions have been loaded. When sourcing the | |
1813 file again, first unload the functions. | |
1814 Example: > | |
1815 | |
1816 " This is the XXX package | |
1817 | |
1818 if exists("XXX_loaded") | |
1819 delfun XXX_one | |
1820 delfun XXX_two | |
1821 endif | |
1822 | |
1823 function XXX_one(a) | |
1824 ... body of function ... | |
1825 endfun | |
1826 | |
1827 function XXX_two(b) | |
1828 ... body of function ... | |
1829 endfun | |
1830 | |
1831 let XXX_loaded = 1 | |
1832 | |
1833 ============================================================================== | |
161 | 1834 *41.11* Writing a plugin *write-plugin* |
7 | 1835 |
1836 You can write a Vim script in such a way that many people can use it. This is | |
1837 called a plugin. Vim users can drop your script in their plugin directory and | |
1838 use its features right away |add-plugin|. | |
1839 | |
1840 There are actually two types of plugins: | |
1841 | |
1842 global plugins: For all types of files. | |
1843 filetype plugins: Only for files of a specific type. | |
1844 | |
1845 In this section the first type is explained. Most items are also relevant for | |
1846 writing filetype plugins. The specifics for filetype plugins are in the next | |
1847 section |write-filetype-plugin|. | |
1848 | |
1849 | |
1850 NAME | |
1851 | |
1852 First of all you must choose a name for your plugin. The features provided | |
1853 by the plugin should be clear from its name. And it should be unlikely that | |
1854 someone else writes a plugin with the same name but which does something | |
1855 different. And please limit the name to 8 characters, to avoid problems on | |
1856 old Windows systems. | |
1857 | |
1858 A script that corrects typing mistakes could be called "typecorr.vim". We | |
1859 will use it here as an example. | |
1860 | |
1861 For the plugin to work for everybody, it should follow a few guidelines. This | |
1862 will be explained step-by-step. The complete example plugin is at the end. | |
1863 | |
1864 | |
1865 BODY | |
1866 | |
1867 Let's start with the body of the plugin, the lines that do the actual work: > | |
1868 | |
1869 14 iabbrev teh the | |
1870 15 iabbrev otehr other | |
1871 16 iabbrev wnat want | |
1872 17 iabbrev synchronisation | |
1873 18 \ synchronization | |
1874 19 let s:count = 4 | |
1875 | |
1876 The actual list should be much longer, of course. | |
1877 | |
1878 The line numbers have only been added to explain a few things, don't put them | |
1879 in your plugin file! | |
1880 | |
1881 | |
1882 HEADER | |
1883 | |
1884 You will probably add new corrections to the plugin and soon have several | |
3830 | 1885 versions lying around. And when distributing this file, people will want to |
7 | 1886 know who wrote this wonderful plugin and where they can send remarks. |
1887 Therefore, put a header at the top of your plugin: > | |
1888 | |
1889 1 " Vim global plugin for correcting typing mistakes | |
1890 2 " Last Change: 2000 Oct 15 | |
1891 3 " Maintainer: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> | |
1892 | |
1893 About copyright and licensing: Since plugins are very useful and it's hardly | |
1894 worth restricting their distribution, please consider making your plugin | |
1895 either public domain or use the Vim |license|. A short note about this near | |
1896 the top of the plugin should be sufficient. Example: > | |
1897 | |
1898 4 " License: This file is placed in the public domain. | |
1899 | |
1900 | |
1901 LINE CONTINUATION, AVOIDING SIDE EFFECTS *use-cpo-save* | |
1902 | |
1903 In line 18 above, the line-continuation mechanism is used |line-continuation|. | |
1904 Users with 'compatible' set will run into trouble here, they will get an error | |
1905 message. We can't just reset 'compatible', because that has a lot of side | |
1906 effects. To avoid this, we will set the 'cpoptions' option to its Vim default | |
1907 value and restore it later. That will allow the use of line-continuation and | |
1908 make the script work for most people. It is done like this: > | |
1909 | |
1910 11 let s:save_cpo = &cpo | |
1911 12 set cpo&vim | |
1912 .. | |
1913 42 let &cpo = s:save_cpo | |
3445 | 1914 43 unlet s:save_cpo |
7 | 1915 |
1916 We first store the old value of 'cpoptions' in the s:save_cpo variable. At | |
1917 the end of the plugin this value is restored. | |
1918 | |
1919 Notice that a script-local variable is used |s:var|. A global variable could | |
1920 already be in use for something else. Always use script-local variables for | |
1921 things that are only used in the script. | |
1922 | |
1923 | |
1924 NOT LOADING | |
1925 | |
1926 It's possible that a user doesn't always want to load this plugin. Or the | |
1927 system administrator has dropped it in the system-wide plugin directory, but a | |
1928 user has his own plugin he wants to use. Then the user must have a chance to | |
1929 disable loading this specific plugin. This will make it possible: > | |
1930 | |
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1931 6 if exists("g:loaded_typecorr") |
7 | 1932 7 finish |
1933 8 endif | |
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1934 9 let g:loaded_typecorr = 1 |
7 | 1935 |
1936 This also avoids that when the script is loaded twice it would cause error | |
1937 messages for redefining functions and cause trouble for autocommands that are | |
1938 added twice. | |
1939 | |
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1940 The name is recommended to start with "loaded_" and then the file name of the |
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1941 plugin, literally. The "g:" is prepended just to avoid mistakes when using |
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1942 the variable in a function (without "g:" it would be a variable local to the |
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1943 function). |
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1944 |
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1945 Using "finish" stops Vim from reading the rest of the file, it's much quicker |
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1946 than using if-endif around the whole file. |
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1947 |
7 | 1948 |
1949 MAPPING | |
1950 | |
1951 Now let's make the plugin more interesting: We will add a mapping that adds a | |
1952 correction for the word under the cursor. We could just pick a key sequence | |
1953 for this mapping, but the user might already use it for something else. To | |
1954 allow the user to define which keys a mapping in a plugin uses, the <Leader> | |
1955 item can be used: > | |
1956 | |
1957 22 map <unique> <Leader>a <Plug>TypecorrAdd | |
1958 | |
1959 The "<Plug>TypecorrAdd" thing will do the work, more about that further on. | |
1960 | |
1961 The user can set the "mapleader" variable to the key sequence that he wants | |
1962 this mapping to start with. Thus if the user has done: > | |
1963 | |
1964 let mapleader = "_" | |
1965 | |
1966 the mapping will define "_a". If the user didn't do this, the default value | |
1967 will be used, which is a backslash. Then a map for "\a" will be defined. | |
1968 | |
1969 Note that <unique> is used, this will cause an error message if the mapping | |
1970 already happened to exist. |:map-<unique>| | |
1971 | |
1972 But what if the user wants to define his own key sequence? We can allow that | |
1973 with this mechanism: > | |
1974 | |
1975 21 if !hasmapto('<Plug>TypecorrAdd') | |
1976 22 map <unique> <Leader>a <Plug>TypecorrAdd | |
1977 23 endif | |
1978 | |
1979 This checks if a mapping to "<Plug>TypecorrAdd" already exists, and only | |
1980 defines the mapping from "<Leader>a" if it doesn't. The user then has a | |
1981 chance of putting this in his vimrc file: > | |
1982 | |
1983 map ,c <Plug>TypecorrAdd | |
1984 | |
1985 Then the mapped key sequence will be ",c" instead of "_a" or "\a". | |
1986 | |
1987 | |
1988 PIECES | |
1989 | |
1990 If a script gets longer, you often want to break up the work in pieces. You | |
1991 can use functions or mappings for this. But you don't want these functions | |
1992 and mappings to interfere with the ones from other scripts. For example, you | |
1993 could define a function Add(), but another script could try to define the same | |
1994 function. To avoid this, we define the function local to the script by | |
1995 prepending it with "s:". | |
1996 | |
1997 We will define a function that adds a new typing correction: > | |
1998 | |
1999 30 function s:Add(from, correct) | |
2000 31 let to = input("type the correction for " . a:from . ": ") | |
2001 32 exe ":iabbrev " . a:from . " " . to | |
2002 .. | |
2003 36 endfunction | |
2004 | |
2005 Now we can call the function s:Add() from within this script. If another | |
2006 script also defines s:Add(), it will be local to that script and can only | |
2007 be called from the script it was defined in. There can also be a global Add() | |
2008 function (without the "s:"), which is again another function. | |
2009 | |
2010 <SID> can be used with mappings. It generates a script ID, which identifies | |
2011 the current script. In our typing correction plugin we use it like this: > | |
2012 | |
2013 24 noremap <unique> <script> <Plug>TypecorrAdd <SID>Add | |
2014 .. | |
2015 28 noremap <SID>Add :call <SID>Add(expand("<cword>"), 1)<CR> | |
2016 | |
2017 Thus when a user types "\a", this sequence is invoked: > | |
2018 | |
2019 \a -> <Plug>TypecorrAdd -> <SID>Add -> :call <SID>Add() | |
2020 | |
2021 If another script would also map <SID>Add, it would get another script ID and | |
2022 thus define another mapping. | |
2023 | |
2024 Note that instead of s:Add() we use <SID>Add() here. That is because the | |
2025 mapping is typed by the user, thus outside of the script. The <SID> is | |
2026 translated to the script ID, so that Vim knows in which script to look for | |
2027 the Add() function. | |
2028 | |
2029 This is a bit complicated, but it's required for the plugin to work together | |
2030 with other plugins. The basic rule is that you use <SID>Add() in mappings and | |
2031 s:Add() in other places (the script itself, autocommands, user commands). | |
2032 | |
2033 We can also add a menu entry to do the same as the mapping: > | |
2034 | |
2035 26 noremenu <script> Plugin.Add\ Correction <SID>Add | |
2036 | |
2037 The "Plugin" menu is recommended for adding menu items for plugins. In this | |
2038 case only one item is used. When adding more items, creating a submenu is | |
2039 recommended. For example, "Plugin.CVS" could be used for a plugin that offers | |
2040 CVS operations "Plugin.CVS.checkin", "Plugin.CVS.checkout", etc. | |
2041 | |
2042 Note that in line 28 ":noremap" is used to avoid that any other mappings cause | |
2043 trouble. Someone may have remapped ":call", for example. In line 24 we also | |
2044 use ":noremap", but we do want "<SID>Add" to be remapped. This is why | |
2045 "<script>" is used here. This only allows mappings which are local to the | |
2046 script. |:map-<script>| The same is done in line 26 for ":noremenu". | |
2047 |:menu-<script>| | |
2048 | |
2049 | |
2050 <SID> AND <Plug> *using-<Plug>* | |
2051 | |
2052 Both <SID> and <Plug> are used to avoid that mappings of typed keys interfere | |
2053 with mappings that are only to be used from other mappings. Note the | |
2054 difference between using <SID> and <Plug>: | |
2055 | |
2056 <Plug> is visible outside of the script. It is used for mappings which the | |
2057 user might want to map a key sequence to. <Plug> is a special code | |
2058 that a typed key will never produce. | |
2059 To make it very unlikely that other plugins use the same sequence of | |
2060 characters, use this structure: <Plug> scriptname mapname | |
2061 In our example the scriptname is "Typecorr" and the mapname is "Add". | |
2062 This results in "<Plug>TypecorrAdd". Only the first character of | |
2063 scriptname and mapname is uppercase, so that we can see where mapname | |
2064 starts. | |
2065 | |
2066 <SID> is the script ID, a unique identifier for a script. | |
2067 Internally Vim translates <SID> to "<SNR>123_", where "123" can be any | |
2068 number. Thus a function "<SID>Add()" will have a name "<SNR>11_Add()" | |
2069 in one script, and "<SNR>22_Add()" in another. You can see this if | |
2070 you use the ":function" command to get a list of functions. The | |
2071 translation of <SID> in mappings is exactly the same, that's how you | |
2072 can call a script-local function from a mapping. | |
2073 | |
2074 | |
2075 USER COMMAND | |
2076 | |
2077 Now let's add a user command to add a correction: > | |
2078 | |
2079 38 if !exists(":Correct") | |
2080 39 command -nargs=1 Correct :call s:Add(<q-args>, 0) | |
2081 40 endif | |
2082 | |
2083 The user command is defined only if no command with the same name already | |
2084 exists. Otherwise we would get an error here. Overriding the existing user | |
2085 command with ":command!" is not a good idea, this would probably make the user | |
2086 wonder why the command he defined himself doesn't work. |:command| | |
2087 | |
2088 | |
2089 SCRIPT VARIABLES | |
2090 | |
2091 When a variable starts with "s:" it is a script variable. It can only be used | |
2092 inside a script. Outside the script it's not visible. This avoids trouble | |
2093 with using the same variable name in different scripts. The variables will be | |
2094 kept as long as Vim is running. And the same variables are used when sourcing | |
2095 the same script again. |s:var| | |
2096 | |
2097 The fun is that these variables can also be used in functions, autocommands | |
2098 and user commands that are defined in the script. In our example we can add | |
2099 a few lines to count the number of corrections: > | |
2100 | |
2101 19 let s:count = 4 | |
2102 .. | |
2103 30 function s:Add(from, correct) | |
2104 .. | |
2105 34 let s:count = s:count + 1 | |
2106 35 echo s:count . " corrections now" | |
2107 36 endfunction | |
2108 | |
2109 First s:count is initialized to 4 in the script itself. When later the | |
2110 s:Add() function is called, it increments s:count. It doesn't matter from | |
2111 where the function was called, since it has been defined in the script, it | |
2112 will use the local variables from this script. | |
2113 | |
2114 | |
2115 THE RESULT | |
2116 | |
2117 Here is the resulting complete example: > | |
2118 | |
2119 1 " Vim global plugin for correcting typing mistakes | |
2120 2 " Last Change: 2000 Oct 15 | |
2121 3 " Maintainer: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> | |
2122 4 " License: This file is placed in the public domain. | |
2123 5 | |
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parents:
2301
diff
changeset
|
2124 6 if exists("g:loaded_typecorr") |
7 | 2125 7 finish |
2126 8 endif | |
2325
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Better implementation of creating the Color Scheme menu. (Juergen Kraemer)
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
2301
diff
changeset
|
2127 9 let g:loaded_typecorr = 1 |
7 | 2128 10 |
2129 11 let s:save_cpo = &cpo | |
2130 12 set cpo&vim | |
2131 13 | |
2132 14 iabbrev teh the | |
2133 15 iabbrev otehr other | |
2134 16 iabbrev wnat want | |
2135 17 iabbrev synchronisation | |
2136 18 \ synchronization | |
2137 19 let s:count = 4 | |
2138 20 | |
2139 21 if !hasmapto('<Plug>TypecorrAdd') | |
2140 22 map <unique> <Leader>a <Plug>TypecorrAdd | |
2141 23 endif | |
2142 24 noremap <unique> <script> <Plug>TypecorrAdd <SID>Add | |
2143 25 | |
2144 26 noremenu <script> Plugin.Add\ Correction <SID>Add | |
2145 27 | |
2146 28 noremap <SID>Add :call <SID>Add(expand("<cword>"), 1)<CR> | |
2147 29 | |
2148 30 function s:Add(from, correct) | |
2149 31 let to = input("type the correction for " . a:from . ": ") | |
2150 32 exe ":iabbrev " . a:from . " " . to | |
2151 33 if a:correct | exe "normal viws\<C-R>\" \b\e" | endif | |
2152 34 let s:count = s:count + 1 | |
2153 35 echo s:count . " corrections now" | |
2154 36 endfunction | |
2155 37 | |
2156 38 if !exists(":Correct") | |
2157 39 command -nargs=1 Correct :call s:Add(<q-args>, 0) | |
2158 40 endif | |
2159 41 | |
2160 42 let &cpo = s:save_cpo | |
3445 | 2161 43 unlet s:save_cpo |
7 | 2162 |
2163 Line 33 wasn't explained yet. It applies the new correction to the word under | |
2164 the cursor. The |:normal| command is used to use the new abbreviation. Note | |
2165 that mappings and abbreviations are expanded here, even though the function | |
2166 was called from a mapping defined with ":noremap". | |
2167 | |
2168 Using "unix" for the 'fileformat' option is recommended. The Vim scripts will | |
2169 then work everywhere. Scripts with 'fileformat' set to "dos" do not work on | |
2170 Unix. Also see |:source_crnl|. To be sure it is set right, do this before | |
2171 writing the file: > | |
2172 | |
2173 :set fileformat=unix | |
2174 | |
2175 | |
2176 DOCUMENTATION *write-local-help* | |
2177 | |
2178 It's a good idea to also write some documentation for your plugin. Especially | |
2179 when its behavior can be changed by the user. See |add-local-help| for how | |
2180 they are installed. | |
2181 | |
2182 Here is a simple example for a plugin help file, called "typecorr.txt": > | |
2183 | |
2184 1 *typecorr.txt* Plugin for correcting typing mistakes | |
2185 2 | |
2186 3 If you make typing mistakes, this plugin will have them corrected | |
2187 4 automatically. | |
2188 5 | |
2189 6 There are currently only a few corrections. Add your own if you like. | |
2190 7 | |
2191 8 Mappings: | |
2192 9 <Leader>a or <Plug>TypecorrAdd | |
2193 10 Add a correction for the word under the cursor. | |
2194 11 | |
2195 12 Commands: | |
2196 13 :Correct {word} | |
2197 14 Add a correction for {word}. | |
2198 15 | |
2199 16 *typecorr-settings* | |
2200 17 This plugin doesn't have any settings. | |
2201 | |
2202 The first line is actually the only one for which the format matters. It will | |
2203 be extracted from the help file to be put in the "LOCAL ADDITIONS:" section of | |
2204 help.txt |local-additions|. The first "*" must be in the first column of the | |
2205 first line. After adding your help file do ":help" and check that the entries | |
2206 line up nicely. | |
2207 | |
2208 You can add more tags inside ** in your help file. But be careful not to use | |
2209 existing help tags. You would probably use the name of your plugin in most of | |
2210 them, like "typecorr-settings" in the example. | |
2211 | |
2212 Using references to other parts of the help in || is recommended. This makes | |
2213 it easy for the user to find associated help. | |
2214 | |
2215 | |
2216 FILETYPE DETECTION *plugin-filetype* | |
2217 | |
2218 If your filetype is not already detected by Vim, you should create a filetype | |
2219 detection snippet in a separate file. It is usually in the form of an | |
2220 autocommand that sets the filetype when the file name matches a pattern. | |
2221 Example: > | |
2222 | |
2223 au BufNewFile,BufRead *.foo set filetype=foofoo | |
2224 | |
2225 Write this single-line file as "ftdetect/foofoo.vim" in the first directory | |
2226 that appears in 'runtimepath'. For Unix that would be | |
2227 "~/.vim/ftdetect/foofoo.vim". The convention is to use the name of the | |
2228 filetype for the script name. | |
2229 | |
2230 You can make more complicated checks if you like, for example to inspect the | |
2231 contents of the file to recognize the language. Also see |new-filetype|. | |
2232 | |
2233 | |
2234 SUMMARY *plugin-special* | |
2235 | |
2236 Summary of special things to use in a plugin: | |
2237 | |
2238 s:name Variables local to the script. | |
2239 | |
2240 <SID> Script-ID, used for mappings and functions local to | |
2241 the script. | |
2242 | |
2243 hasmapto() Function to test if the user already defined a mapping | |
2244 for functionality the script offers. | |
2245 | |
2246 <Leader> Value of "mapleader", which the user defines as the | |
2247 keys that plugin mappings start with. | |
2248 | |
2249 :map <unique> Give a warning if a mapping already exists. | |
2250 | |
2251 :noremap <script> Use only mappings local to the script, not global | |
2252 mappings. | |
2253 | |
2254 exists(":Cmd") Check if a user command already exists. | |
2255 | |
2256 ============================================================================== | |
161 | 2257 *41.12* Writing a filetype plugin *write-filetype-plugin* *ftplugin* |
7 | 2258 |
2259 A filetype plugin is like a global plugin, except that it sets options and | |
2260 defines mappings for the current buffer only. See |add-filetype-plugin| for | |
2261 how this type of plugin is used. | |
2262 | |
161 | 2263 First read the section on global plugins above |41.11|. All that is said there |
7 | 2264 also applies to filetype plugins. There are a few extras, which are explained |
2265 here. The essential thing is that a filetype plugin should only have an | |
2266 effect on the current buffer. | |
2267 | |
2268 | |
2269 DISABLING | |
2270 | |
2271 If you are writing a filetype plugin to be used by many people, they need a | |
2272 chance to disable loading it. Put this at the top of the plugin: > | |
2273 | |
2274 " Only do this when not done yet for this buffer | |
2275 if exists("b:did_ftplugin") | |
2276 finish | |
2277 endif | |
2278 let b:did_ftplugin = 1 | |
2279 | |
2280 This also needs to be used to avoid that the same plugin is executed twice for | |
2281 the same buffer (happens when using an ":edit" command without arguments). | |
2282 | |
2283 Now users can disable loading the default plugin completely by making a | |
2284 filetype plugin with only this line: > | |
2285 | |
2286 let b:did_ftplugin = 1 | |
2287 | |
2288 This does require that the filetype plugin directory comes before $VIMRUNTIME | |
2289 in 'runtimepath'! | |
2290 | |
2291 If you do want to use the default plugin, but overrule one of the settings, | |
2292 you can write the different setting in a script: > | |
2293 | |
2294 setlocal textwidth=70 | |
2295 | |
2296 Now write this in the "after" directory, so that it gets sourced after the | |
2297 distributed "vim.vim" ftplugin |after-directory|. For Unix this would be | |
2298 "~/.vim/after/ftplugin/vim.vim". Note that the default plugin will have set | |
2299 "b:did_ftplugin", but it is ignored here. | |
2300 | |
2301 | |
2302 OPTIONS | |
2303 | |
2304 To make sure the filetype plugin only affects the current buffer use the > | |
2305 | |
2306 :setlocal | |
2307 | |
2308 command to set options. And only set options which are local to a buffer (see | |
2309 the help for the option to check that). When using |:setlocal| for global | |
2310 options or options local to a window, the value will change for many buffers, | |
2311 and that is not what a filetype plugin should do. | |
2312 | |
2313 When an option has a value that is a list of flags or items, consider using | |
2314 "+=" and "-=" to keep the existing value. Be aware that the user may have | |
2315 changed an option value already. First resetting to the default value and | |
2698
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Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
2662
diff
changeset
|
2316 then changing it is often a good idea. Example: > |
7 | 2317 |
2318 :setlocal formatoptions& formatoptions+=ro | |
2319 | |
2320 | |
2321 MAPPINGS | |
2322 | |
2323 To make sure mappings will only work in the current buffer use the > | |
2324 | |
2325 :map <buffer> | |
2326 | |
2327 command. This needs to be combined with the two-step mapping explained above. | |
2328 An example of how to define functionality in a filetype plugin: > | |
2329 | |
2330 if !hasmapto('<Plug>JavaImport') | |
2331 map <buffer> <unique> <LocalLeader>i <Plug>JavaImport | |
2332 endif | |
2333 noremap <buffer> <unique> <Plug>JavaImport oimport ""<Left><Esc> | |
2334 | |
2335 |hasmapto()| is used to check if the user has already defined a map to | |
2336 <Plug>JavaImport. If not, then the filetype plugin defines the default | |
2337 mapping. This starts with |<LocalLeader>|, which allows the user to select | |
2338 the key(s) he wants filetype plugin mappings to start with. The default is a | |
2339 backslash. | |
2340 "<unique>" is used to give an error message if the mapping already exists or | |
2341 overlaps with an existing mapping. | |
2342 |:noremap| is used to avoid that any other mappings that the user has defined | |
2343 interferes. You might want to use ":noremap <script>" to allow remapping | |
2344 mappings defined in this script that start with <SID>. | |
2345 | |
2346 The user must have a chance to disable the mappings in a filetype plugin, | |
2347 without disabling everything. Here is an example of how this is done for a | |
2348 plugin for the mail filetype: > | |
2349 | |
2350 " Add mappings, unless the user didn't want this. | |
2351 if !exists("no_plugin_maps") && !exists("no_mail_maps") | |
2352 " Quote text by inserting "> " | |
2353 if !hasmapto('<Plug>MailQuote') | |
2354 vmap <buffer> <LocalLeader>q <Plug>MailQuote | |
2355 nmap <buffer> <LocalLeader>q <Plug>MailQuote | |
2356 endif | |
2357 vnoremap <buffer> <Plug>MailQuote :s/^/> /<CR> | |
2358 nnoremap <buffer> <Plug>MailQuote :.,$s/^/> /<CR> | |
2359 endif | |
2360 | |
2361 Two global variables are used: | |
11262 | 2362 |no_plugin_maps| disables mappings for all filetype plugins |
2363 |no_mail_maps| disables mappings for the "mail" filetype | |
7 | 2364 |
2365 | |
2366 USER COMMANDS | |
2367 | |
2368 To add a user command for a specific file type, so that it can only be used in | |
2369 one buffer, use the "-buffer" argument to |:command|. Example: > | |
2370 | |
2371 :command -buffer Make make %:r.s | |
2372 | |
2373 | |
2374 VARIABLES | |
2375 | |
2376 A filetype plugin will be sourced for each buffer of the type it's for. Local | |
2377 script variables |s:var| will be shared between all invocations. Use local | |
2378 buffer variables |b:var| if you want a variable specifically for one buffer. | |
2379 | |
2380 | |
2381 FUNCTIONS | |
2382 | |
2383 When defining a function, this only needs to be done once. But the filetype | |
2384 plugin will be sourced every time a file with this filetype will be opened. | |
2207
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Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
2154
diff
changeset
|
2385 This construct makes sure the function is only defined once: > |
7 | 2386 |
2387 :if !exists("*s:Func") | |
2388 : function s:Func(arg) | |
2389 : ... | |
2390 : endfunction | |
2391 :endif | |
2392 < | |
2393 | |
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commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/38a55639d603823efcf2d2fdf542dbffdeb60b75
Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
parents:
7924
diff
changeset
|
2394 UNDO *undo_indent* *undo_ftplugin* |
7 | 2395 |
2396 When the user does ":setfiletype xyz" the effect of the previous filetype | |
2397 should be undone. Set the b:undo_ftplugin variable to the commands that will | |
2398 undo the settings in your filetype plugin. Example: > | |
2399 | |
2400 let b:undo_ftplugin = "setlocal fo< com< tw< commentstring<" | |
2401 \ . "| unlet b:match_ignorecase b:match_words b:match_skip" | |
2402 | |
2403 Using ":setlocal" with "<" after the option name resets the option to its | |
2404 global value. That is mostly the best way to reset the option value. | |
2405 | |
2406 This does require removing the "C" flag from 'cpoptions' to allow line | |
2407 continuation, as mentioned above |use-cpo-save|. | |
2408 | |
8061
abd64cf67bcf
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/38a55639d603823efcf2d2fdf542dbffdeb60b75
Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
parents:
7924
diff
changeset
|
2409 For undoing the effect of an indent script, the b:undo_indent variable should |
abd64cf67bcf
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/38a55639d603823efcf2d2fdf542dbffdeb60b75
Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
parents:
7924
diff
changeset
|
2410 be set accordingly. |
abd64cf67bcf
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/38a55639d603823efcf2d2fdf542dbffdeb60b75
Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
parents:
7924
diff
changeset
|
2411 |
7 | 2412 |
2413 FILE NAME | |
2414 | |
2415 The filetype must be included in the file name |ftplugin-name|. Use one of | |
2416 these three forms: | |
2417 | |
2418 .../ftplugin/stuff.vim | |
2419 .../ftplugin/stuff_foo.vim | |
2420 .../ftplugin/stuff/bar.vim | |
2421 | |
2422 "stuff" is the filetype, "foo" and "bar" are arbitrary names. | |
2423 | |
2424 | |
2425 SUMMARY *ftplugin-special* | |
2426 | |
2427 Summary of special things to use in a filetype plugin: | |
2428 | |
2429 <LocalLeader> Value of "maplocalleader", which the user defines as | |
2430 the keys that filetype plugin mappings start with. | |
2431 | |
2432 :map <buffer> Define a mapping local to the buffer. | |
2433 | |
2434 :noremap <script> Only remap mappings defined in this script that start | |
2435 with <SID>. | |
2436 | |
2437 :setlocal Set an option for the current buffer only. | |
2438 | |
2439 :command -buffer Define a user command local to the buffer. | |
2440 | |
2441 exists("*s:Func") Check if a function was already defined. | |
2442 | |
2443 Also see |plugin-special|, the special things used for all plugins. | |
2444 | |
2445 ============================================================================== | |
161 | 2446 *41.13* Writing a compiler plugin *write-compiler-plugin* |
7 | 2447 |
2448 A compiler plugin sets options for use with a specific compiler. The user can | |
2449 load it with the |:compiler| command. The main use is to set the | |
2450 'errorformat' and 'makeprg' options. | |
2451 | |
2452 Easiest is to have a look at examples. This command will edit all the default | |
2453 compiler plugins: > | |
2454 | |
2455 :next $VIMRUNTIME/compiler/*.vim | |
2456 | |
2457 Use |:next| to go to the next plugin file. | |
2458 | |
2459 There are two special items about these files. First is a mechanism to allow | |
2460 a user to overrule or add to the default file. The default files start with: > | |
2461 | |
2462 :if exists("current_compiler") | |
2463 : finish | |
2464 :endif | |
2465 :let current_compiler = "mine" | |
2466 | |
2467 When you write a compiler file and put it in your personal runtime directory | |
2468 (e.g., ~/.vim/compiler for Unix), you set the "current_compiler" variable to | |
2469 make the default file skip the settings. | |
570 | 2470 *:CompilerSet* |
7 | 2471 The second mechanism is to use ":set" for ":compiler!" and ":setlocal" for |
2472 ":compiler". Vim defines the ":CompilerSet" user command for this. However, | |
2473 older Vim versions don't, thus your plugin should define it then. This is an | |
2474 example: > | |
2475 | |
2476 if exists(":CompilerSet") != 2 | |
2477 command -nargs=* CompilerSet setlocal <args> | |
2478 endif | |
2479 CompilerSet errorformat& " use the default 'errorformat' | |
2480 CompilerSet makeprg=nmake | |
2481 | |
2482 When you write a compiler plugin for the Vim distribution or for a system-wide | |
2483 runtime directory, use the mechanism mentioned above. When | |
2484 "current_compiler" was already set by a user plugin nothing will be done. | |
2485 | |
2486 When you write a compiler plugin to overrule settings from a default plugin, | |
2487 don't check "current_compiler". This plugin is supposed to be loaded | |
2488 last, thus it should be in a directory at the end of 'runtimepath'. For Unix | |
2489 that could be ~/.vim/after/compiler. | |
2490 | |
2491 ============================================================================== | |
170 | 2492 *41.14* Writing a plugin that loads quickly *write-plugin-quickload* |
2493 | |
2494 A plugin may grow and become quite long. The startup delay may become | |
1620 | 2495 noticeable, while you hardly ever use the plugin. Then it's time for a |
170 | 2496 quickload plugin. |
2497 | |
2498 The basic idea is that the plugin is loaded twice. The first time user | |
2499 commands and mappings are defined that offer the functionality. The second | |
2500 time the functions that implement the functionality are defined. | |
2501 | |
2502 It may sound surprising that quickload means loading a script twice. What we | |
2503 mean is that it loads quickly the first time, postponing the bulk of the | |
2504 script to the second time, which only happens when you actually use it. When | |
2505 you always use the functionality it actually gets slower! | |
2506 | |
793 | 2507 Note that since Vim 7 there is an alternative: use the |autoload| |
2508 functionality |41.15|. | |
2509 | |
170 | 2510 The following example shows how it's done: > |
2511 | |
2512 " Vim global plugin for demonstrating quick loading | |
2513 " Last Change: 2005 Feb 25 | |
2514 " Maintainer: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> | |
2515 " License: This file is placed in the public domain. | |
2516 | |
2517 if !exists("s:did_load") | |
2518 command -nargs=* BNRead call BufNetRead(<f-args>) | |
2519 map <F19> :call BufNetWrite('something')<CR> | |
2520 | |
2521 let s:did_load = 1 | |
2522 exe 'au FuncUndefined BufNet* source ' . expand('<sfile>') | |
2523 finish | |
2524 endif | |
2525 | |
2526 function BufNetRead(...) | |
2527 echo 'BufNetRead(' . string(a:000) . ')' | |
2528 " read functionality here | |
2529 endfunction | |
2530 | |
2531 function BufNetWrite(...) | |
2532 echo 'BufNetWrite(' . string(a:000) . ')' | |
2533 " write functionality here | |
2534 endfunction | |
2535 | |
2536 When the script is first loaded "s:did_load" is not set. The commands between | |
2537 the "if" and "endif" will be executed. This ends in a |:finish| command, thus | |
2538 the rest of the script is not executed. | |
2539 | |
2540 The second time the script is loaded "s:did_load" exists and the commands | |
2541 after the "endif" are executed. This defines the (possible long) | |
2542 BufNetRead() and BufNetWrite() functions. | |
2543 | |
2544 If you drop this script in your plugin directory Vim will execute it on | |
2545 startup. This is the sequence of events that happens: | |
2546 | |
2547 1. The "BNRead" command is defined and the <F19> key is mapped when the script | |
2548 is sourced at startup. A |FuncUndefined| autocommand is defined. The | |
2549 ":finish" command causes the script to terminate early. | |
2550 | |
2551 2. The user types the BNRead command or presses the <F19> key. The | |
2552 BufNetRead() or BufNetWrite() function will be called. | |
856 | 2553 |
170 | 2554 3. Vim can't find the function and triggers the |FuncUndefined| autocommand |
2555 event. Since the pattern "BufNet*" matches the invoked function, the | |
2556 command "source fname" will be executed. "fname" will be equal to the name | |
2557 of the script, no matter where it is located, because it comes from | |
2558 expanding "<sfile>" (see |expand()|). | |
2559 | |
2560 4. The script is sourced again, the "s:did_load" variable exists and the | |
2561 functions are defined. | |
2562 | |
2563 Notice that the functions that are loaded afterwards match the pattern in the | |
2564 |FuncUndefined| autocommand. You must make sure that no other plugin defines | |
2565 functions that match this pattern. | |
2566 | |
2567 ============================================================================== | |
2568 *41.15* Writing library scripts *write-library-script* | |
2569 | |
2570 Some functionality will be required in several places. When this becomes more | |
2571 than a few lines you will want to put it in one script and use it from many | |
2572 scripts. We will call that one script a library script. | |
2573 | |
2574 Manually loading a library script is possible, so long as you avoid loading it | |
2575 when it's already done. You can do this with the |exists()| function. | |
2576 Example: > | |
2577 | |
2578 if !exists('*MyLibFunction') | |
2579 runtime library/mylibscript.vim | |
2580 endif | |
2581 call MyLibFunction(arg) | |
2582 | |
2583 Here you need to know that MyLibFunction() is defined in a script | |
2584 "library/mylibscript.vim" in one of the directories in 'runtimepath'. | |
2585 | |
2586 To make this a bit simpler Vim offers the autoload mechanism. Then the | |
2587 example looks like this: > | |
2588 | |
270 | 2589 call mylib#myfunction(arg) |
170 | 2590 |
2591 That's a lot simpler, isn't it? Vim will recognize the function name and when | |
2592 it's not defined search for the script "autoload/mylib.vim" in 'runtimepath'. | |
270 | 2593 That script must define the "mylib#myfunction()" function. |
170 | 2594 |
2595 You can put many other functions in the mylib.vim script, you are free to | |
2596 organize your functions in library scripts. But you must use function names | |
323 | 2597 where the part before the '#' matches the script name. Otherwise Vim would |
2598 not know what script to load. | |
170 | 2599 |
681 | 2600 If you get really enthusiastic and write lots of library scripts, you may |
170 | 2601 want to use subdirectories. Example: > |
2602 | |
270 | 2603 call netlib#ftp#read('somefile') |
170 | 2604 |
2605 For Unix the library script used for this could be: | |
2606 | |
2607 ~/.vim/autoload/netlib/ftp.vim | |
2608 | |
2609 Where the function is defined like this: > | |
2610 | |
270 | 2611 function netlib#ftp#read(fname) |
170 | 2612 " Read the file fname through ftp |
2613 endfunction | |
2614 | |
2615 Notice that the name the function is defined with is exactly the same as the | |
323 | 2616 name used for calling the function. And the part before the last '#' |
170 | 2617 exactly matches the subdirectory and script name. |
2618 | |
2619 You can use the same mechanism for variables: > | |
2620 | |
270 | 2621 let weekdays = dutch#weekdays |
170 | 2622 |
2623 This will load the script "autoload/dutch.vim", which should contain something | |
2624 like: > | |
2625 | |
270 | 2626 let dutch#weekdays = ['zondag', 'maandag', 'dinsdag', 'woensdag', |
170 | 2627 \ 'donderdag', 'vrijdag', 'zaterdag'] |
2628 | |
2629 Further reading: |autoload|. | |
2630 | |
2631 ============================================================================== | |
793 | 2632 *41.16* Distributing Vim scripts *distribute-script* |
2633 | |
2634 Vim users will look for scripts on the Vim website: http://www.vim.org. | |
2635 If you made something that is useful for others, share it! | |
2636 | |
2637 Vim scripts can be used on any system. There might not be a tar or gzip | |
2638 command. If you want to pack files together and/or compress them the "zip" | |
2639 utility is recommended. | |
2640 | |
2641 For utmost portability use Vim itself to pack scripts together. This can be | |
2642 done with the Vimball utility. See |vimball|. | |
2643 | |
799 | 2644 It's good if you add a line to allow automatic updating. See |glvs-plugins|. |
2645 | |
793 | 2646 ============================================================================== |
7 | 2647 |
2648 Next chapter: |usr_42.txt| Add new menus | |
2649 | |
14519 | 2650 Copyright: see |manual-copyright| vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: |