| *usr_51.txt* For Vim version 9.0. Last change: 2022 Jun 03 |
| |
| VIM USER MANUAL - by Bram Moolenaar |
| |
| Write plugins |
| |
| |
| Plugins can be used to define settings for a specific type of file, syntax |
| highlighting and many other things. This chapter explains how to write the |
| most common Vim plugins. |
| |
| |51.1| Writing a generic plugin |
| |51.2| Writing a filetype plugin |
| |51.3| Writing a compiler plugin |
| |51.4| Distributing Vim scripts |
| |
| Next chapter: |usr_52.txt| Write large plugins |
| Previous chapter: |usr_50.txt| Advanced Vim script writing |
| Table of contents: |usr_toc.txt| |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *51.1* Writing a generic plugin *write-plugin* |
| |
| You can write a Vim script in such a way that many people can use it. This is |
| called a plugin. Vim users can drop your script in their plugin directory and |
| use its features right away |add-plugin|. |
| |
| There are actually two types of plugins: |
| |
| global plugins: For all types of files. |
| filetype plugins: Only for files of a specific type. |
| |
| In this section the first type is explained. Most items are also relevant for |
| writing filetype plugins. The specifics for filetype plugins are in the next |
| section |write-filetype-plugin|. |
| |
| We will use |Vim9| syntax here, the recommended way to write new plugins. |
| Make sure the file starts with the `vim9script` command. |
| |
| |
| NAME |
| |
| First of all you must choose a name for your plugin. The features provided |
| by the plugin should be clear from its name. And it should be unlikely that |
| someone else writes a plugin with the same name but which does something |
| different. |
| |
| A script that corrects typing mistakes could be called "typecorrect.vim". We |
| will use it here as an example. |
| |
| For the plugin to work for everybody, it should follow a few guidelines. This |
| will be explained step-by-step. The complete example plugin is at the end. |
| |
| |
| BODY |
| |
| Let's start with the body of the plugin, the lines that do the actual work: > |
| |
| 12 iabbrev teh the |
| 13 iabbrev otehr other |
| 14 iabbrev wnat want |
| 15 iabbrev synchronisation |
| 16 \ synchronization |
| |
| The actual list should be much longer, of course. |
| |
| The line numbers have only been added to explain a few things, don't put them |
| in your plugin file! |
| |
| |
| FIRST LINE |
| > |
| 1 vim9script noclear |
| |
| You need to use `vim9script` as the very first command. Best is to put it in |
| the very first line. |
| |
| The script we are writing will have a `finish` command to bail out when it is |
| loaded a second time. To avoid that the items defined in the script are lost |
| the "noclear" argument is used. More info about this at |vim9-reload|. |
| |
| |
| HEADER |
| |
| You will probably add new corrections to the plugin and soon have several |
| versions lying around. And when distributing this file, people will want to |
| know who wrote this wonderful plugin and where they can send remarks. |
| Therefore, put a header at the top of your plugin: > |
| |
| 2 # Vim global plugin for correcting typing mistakes |
| 3 # Last Change: 2021 Dec 30 |
| 4 # Maintainer: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> |
| |
| About copyright and licensing: Since plugins are very useful and it's hardly |
| worth restricting their distribution, please consider making your plugin |
| either public domain or use the Vim |license|. A short note about this near |
| the top of the plugin should be sufficient. Example: > |
| |
| 5 # License: This file is placed in the public domain. |
| |
| |
| NOT LOADING |
| |
| It is possible that a user doesn't always want to load this plugin. Or the |
| system administrator has dropped it in the system-wide plugin directory, but a |
| user has his own plugin he wants to use. Then the user must have a chance to |
| disable loading this specific plugin. These lines will make it possible: > |
| |
| 7 if exists("g:loaded_typecorrect") |
| 8 finish |
| 9 endif |
| 10 g:loaded_typecorrect = 1 |
| |
| This also avoids that when the script is loaded twice it would pointlessly |
| redefine functions and cause trouble for autocommands that are added twice. |
| |
| The name is recommended to start with "g:loaded_" and then the file name of |
| the plugin, literally. The "g:" is prepended to make the variable global, so |
| that other places can check whether its functionality is available. Without |
| "g:" it would be local to the script. |
| |
| Using `finish` stops Vim from reading the rest of the file, it's much quicker |
| than using if-endif around the whole file, since Vim would still need to parse |
| the commands to find the `endif`. |
| |
| |
| MAPPING |
| |
| Now let's make the plugin more interesting: We will add a mapping that adds a |
| correction for the word under the cursor. We could just pick a key sequence |
| for this mapping, but the user might already use it for something else. To |
| allow the user to define which keys a mapping in a plugin uses, the <Leader> |
| item can be used: > |
| |
| 20 map <unique> <Leader>a <Plug>TypecorrAdd; |
| |
| The "<Plug>TypecorrAdd;" thing will do the work, more about that further on. |
| |
| The user can set the "g:mapleader" variable to the key sequence that he wants |
| plugin mappings to start with. Thus if the user has done: > |
| |
| g:mapleader = "_" |
| |
| the mapping will define "_a". If the user didn't do this, the default value |
| will be used, which is a backslash. Then a map for "\a" will be defined. |
| |
| Note that <unique> is used, this will cause an error message if the mapping |
| already happened to exist. |:map-<unique>| |
| |
| But what if the user wants to define his own key sequence? We can allow that |
| with this mechanism: > |
| |
| 19 if !hasmapto('<Plug>TypecorrAdd;') |
| 20 map <unique> <Leader>a <Plug>TypecorrAdd; |
| 21 endif |
| |
| This checks if a mapping to "<Plug>TypecorrAdd;" already exists, and only |
| defines the mapping from "<Leader>a" if it doesn't. The user then has a |
| chance of putting this in his vimrc file: > |
| |
| map ,c <Plug>TypecorrAdd; |
| |
| Then the mapped key sequence will be ",c" instead of "_a" or "\a". |
| |
| |
| PIECES |
| |
| If a script gets longer, you often want to break up the work in pieces. You |
| can use functions or mappings for this. But you don't want these functions |
| and mappings to interfere with the ones from other scripts. For example, you |
| could define a function Add(), but another script could try to define the same |
| function. To avoid this, we define the function local to the script. |
| Fortunately, in |Vim9| script this is the default. In a legacy script you |
| would need to prefix the name with "s:". |
| |
| We will define a function that adds a new typing correction: > |
| |
| 28 def Add(from: string, correct: bool) |
| 29 var to = input($"type the correction for {from}: ") |
| 30 exe $":iabbrev {from} {to}" |
| ... |
| 34 enddef |
| |
| Now we can call the function Add() from within this script. If another |
| script also defines Add(), it will be local to that script and can only |
| be called from that script. There can also be a global g:Add() function, |
| which is again another function. |
| |
| <SID> can be used with mappings. It generates a script ID, which identifies |
| the current script. In our typing correction plugin we use it like this: > |
| |
| 22 noremap <unique> <script> <Plug>TypecorrAdd; <SID>Add |
| ... |
| 26 noremap <SID>Add :call <SID>Add(expand("<cword>"), true)<CR> |
| |
| Thus when a user types "\a", this sequence is invoked: > |
| |
| \a -> <Plug>TypecorrAdd; -> <SID>Add -> :call <SID>Add(...) |
| |
| If another script also maps <SID>Add, it will get another script ID and |
| thus define another mapping. |
| |
| Note that instead of Add() we use <SID>Add() here. That is because the |
| mapping is typed by the user, thus outside of the script context. The <SID> |
| is translated to the script ID, so that Vim knows in which script to look for |
| the Add() function. |
| |
| This is a bit complicated, but it's required for the plugin to work together |
| with other plugins. The basic rule is that you use <SID>Add() in mappings and |
| Add() in other places (the script itself, autocommands, user commands). |
| |
| We can also add a menu entry to do the same as the mapping: > |
| |
| 24 noremenu <script> Plugin.Add\ Correction <SID>Add |
| |
| The "Plugin" menu is recommended for adding menu items for plugins. In this |
| case only one item is used. When adding more items, creating a submenu is |
| recommended. For example, "Plugin.CVS" could be used for a plugin that offers |
| CVS operations "Plugin.CVS.checkin", "Plugin.CVS.checkout", etc. |
| |
| Note that in line 28 ":noremap" is used to avoid that any other mappings cause |
| trouble. Someone may have remapped ":call", for example. In line 24 we also |
| use ":noremap", but we do want "<SID>Add" to be remapped. This is why |
| "<script>" is used here. This only allows mappings which are local to the |
| script. |:map-<script>| The same is done in line 26 for ":noremenu". |
| |:menu-<script>| |
| |
| |
| <SID> AND <Plug> *using-<Plug>* |
| |
| Both <SID> and <Plug> are used to avoid that mappings of typed keys interfere |
| with mappings that are only to be used from other mappings. Note the |
| difference between using <SID> and <Plug>: |
| |
| <Plug> is visible outside of the script. It is used for mappings which the |
| user might want to map a key sequence to. <Plug> is a special code |
| that a typed key will never produce. |
| To make it very unlikely that other plugins use the same sequence of |
| characters, use this structure: <Plug> scriptname mapname |
| In our example the scriptname is "Typecorr" and the mapname is "Add". |
| We add a semicolon as the terminator. This results in |
| "<Plug>TypecorrAdd;". Only the first character of scriptname and |
| mapname is uppercase, so that we can see where mapname starts. |
| |
| <SID> is the script ID, a unique identifier for a script. |
| Internally Vim translates <SID> to "<SNR>123_", where "123" can be any |
| number. Thus a function "<SID>Add()" will have a name "<SNR>11_Add()" |
| in one script, and "<SNR>22_Add()" in another. You can see this if |
| you use the ":function" command to get a list of functions. The |
| translation of <SID> in mappings is exactly the same, that's how you |
| can call a script-local function from a mapping. |
| |
| |
| USER COMMAND |
| |
| Now let's add a user command to add a correction: > |
| |
| 36 if !exists(":Correct") |
| 37 command -nargs=1 Correct :call Add(<q-args>, false) |
| 38 endif |
| |
| The user command is defined only if no command with the same name already |
| exists. Otherwise we would get an error here. Overriding the existing user |
| command with ":command!" is not a good idea, this would probably make the user |
| wonder why the command he defined himself doesn't work. |:command| |
| If it did happen you can find out who to blame with: > |
| |
| verbose command Correct |
| |
| |
| SCRIPT VARIABLES |
| |
| When a variable starts with "s:" it is a script variable. It can only be used |
| inside a script. Outside the script it's not visible. This avoids trouble |
| with using the same variable name in different scripts. The variables will be |
| kept as long as Vim is running. And the same variables are used when sourcing |
| the same script again. |s:var| |
| |
| The nice thing about |Vim9| script is that variables are local to the script |
| by default. You can prepend "s:" if you like, but you do not need to. And |
| functions in the script can also use the script variables without a prefix |
| (they must be declared before the function for this to work). |
| |
| Script-local variables can also be used in functions, autocommands and user |
| commands that are defined in the script. Thus they are the perfect way to |
| share information between parts of your plugin, without it leaking out. In |
| our example we can add a few lines to count the number of corrections: > |
| |
| 17 var count = 4 |
| ... |
| 28 def Add(from: string, correct: bool) |
| ... |
| 32 count += 1 |
| 33 echo "you now have " .. count .. " corrections" |
| 34 enddef |
| |
| "count" is declared and initialized to 4 in the script itself. When later |
| the Add() function is called, it increments "count". It doesn't matter from |
| where the function was called, since it has been defined in the script, it |
| will use the local variables from this script. |
| |
| |
| THE RESULT |
| |
| Here is the resulting complete example: > |
| |
| 1 vim9script noclear |
| 2 # Vim global plugin for correcting typing mistakes |
| 3 # Last Change: 2021 Dec 30 |
| 4 # Maintainer: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> |
| 5 # License: This file is placed in the public domain. |
| 6 |
| 7 if exists("g:loaded_typecorrect") |
| 8 finish |
| 9 endif |
| 10 g:loaded_typecorrect = 1 |
| 11 |
| 12 iabbrev teh the |
| 13 iabbrev otehr other |
| 14 iabbrev wnat want |
| 15 iabbrev synchronisation |
| 16 \ synchronization |
| 17 var count = 4 |
| 18 |
| 19 if !hasmapto('<Plug>TypecorrAdd;') |
| 20 map <unique> <Leader>a <Plug>TypecorrAdd; |
| 21 endif |
| 22 noremap <unique> <script> <Plug>TypecorrAdd; <SID>Add |
| 23 |
| 24 noremenu <script> Plugin.Add\ Correction <SID>Add |
| 25 |
| 26 noremap <SID>Add :call <SID>Add(expand("<cword>"), true)<CR> |
| 27 |
| 28 def Add(from: string, correct: bool) |
| 29 var to = input("type the correction for " .. from .. ": ") |
| 30 exe ":iabbrev " .. from .. " " .. to |
| 31 if correct | exe "normal viws\<C-R>\" \b\e" | endif |
| 32 count += 1 |
| 33 echo "you now have " .. count .. " corrections" |
| 34 enddef |
| 35 |
| 36 if !exists(":Correct") |
| 37 command -nargs=1 Correct call Add(<q-args>, false) |
| 38 endif |
| |
| Line 31 wasn't explained yet. It applies the new correction to the word under |
| the cursor. The |:normal| command is used to use the new abbreviation. Note |
| that mappings and abbreviations are expanded here, even though the function |
| was called from a mapping defined with ":noremap". |
| |
| |
| DOCUMENTATION *write-local-help* |
| |
| It's a good idea to also write some documentation for your plugin. Especially |
| when its behavior can be changed by the user. See |add-local-help| for how |
| they are installed. |
| |
| Here is a simple example for a plugin help file, called "typecorrect.txt": > |
| |
| 1 *typecorrect.txt* Plugin for correcting typing mistakes |
| 2 |
| 3 If you make typing mistakes, this plugin will have them corrected |
| 4 automatically. |
| 5 |
| 6 There are currently only a few corrections. Add your own if you like. |
| 7 |
| 8 Mappings: |
| 9 <Leader>a or <Plug>TypecorrAdd; |
| 10 Add a correction for the word under the cursor. |
| 11 |
| 12 Commands: |
| 13 :Correct {word} |
| 14 Add a correction for {word}. |
| 15 |
| 16 *typecorrect-settings* |
| 17 This plugin doesn't have any settings. |
| |
| The first line is actually the only one for which the format matters. It will |
| be extracted from the help file to be put in the "LOCAL ADDITIONS:" section of |
| help.txt |local-additions|. The first "*" must be in the first column of the |
| first line. After adding your help file do ":help" and check that the entries |
| line up nicely. |
| |
| You can add more tags inside ** in your help file. But be careful not to use |
| existing help tags. You would probably use the name of your plugin in most of |
| them, like "typecorrect-settings" in the example. |
| |
| Using references to other parts of the help in || is recommended. This makes |
| it easy for the user to find associated help. |
| |
| |
| SUMMARY *plugin-special* |
| |
| Summary of special things to use in a plugin: |
| |
| var name Variable local to the script. |
| |
| <SID> Script-ID, used for mappings and functions local to |
| the script. |
| |
| hasmapto() Function to test if the user already defined a mapping |
| for functionality the script offers. |
| |
| <Leader> Value of "mapleader", which the user defines as the |
| keys that plugin mappings start with. |
| |
| map <unique> Give a warning if a mapping already exists. |
| |
| noremap <script> Use only mappings local to the script, not global |
| mappings. |
| |
| exists(":Cmd") Check if a user command already exists. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *51.2* Writing a filetype plugin *write-filetype-plugin* *ftplugin* |
| |
| A filetype plugin is like a global plugin, except that it sets options and |
| defines mappings for the current buffer only. See |add-filetype-plugin| for |
| how this type of plugin is used. |
| |
| First read the section on global plugins above |51.1|. All that is said there |
| also applies to filetype plugins. There are a few extras, which are explained |
| here. The essential thing is that a filetype plugin should only have an |
| effect on the current buffer. |
| |
| |
| DISABLING |
| |
| If you are writing a filetype plugin to be used by many people, they need a |
| chance to disable loading it. Put this at the top of the plugin: > |
| |
| # Only do this when not done yet for this buffer |
| if exists("b:did_ftplugin") |
| finish |
| endif |
| b:did_ftplugin = 1 |
| |
| This also needs to be used to avoid that the same plugin is executed twice for |
| the same buffer (happens when using an ":edit" command without arguments). |
| |
| Now users can disable loading the default plugin completely by making a |
| filetype plugin with only these lines: > |
| |
| vim9script |
| b:did_ftplugin = 1 |
| |
| This does require that the filetype plugin directory comes before $VIMRUNTIME |
| in 'runtimepath'! |
| |
| If you do want to use the default plugin, but overrule one of the settings, |
| you can write the different setting in a script: > |
| |
| setlocal textwidth=70 |
| |
| Now write this in the "after" directory, so that it gets sourced after the |
| distributed "vim.vim" ftplugin |after-directory|. For Unix this would be |
| "~/.vim/after/ftplugin/vim.vim". Note that the default plugin will have set |
| "b:did_ftplugin", it is ignored here. |
| |
| |
| OPTIONS |
| |
| To make sure the filetype plugin only affects the current buffer use the > |
| |
| setlocal |
| |
| command to set options. And only set options which are local to a buffer (see |
| the help for the option to check that). When using `:setlocal` for global |
| options or options local to a window, the value will change for many buffers, |
| and that is not what a filetype plugin should do. |
| |
| When an option has a value that is a list of flags or items, consider using |
| "+=" and "-=" to keep the existing value. Be aware that the user may have |
| changed an option value already. First resetting to the default value and |
| then changing it is often a good idea. Example: > |
| |
| setlocal formatoptions& formatoptions+=ro |
| |
| |
| MAPPINGS |
| |
| To make sure mappings will only work in the current buffer use the > |
| |
| map <buffer> |
| |
| command. This needs to be combined with the two-step mapping explained above. |
| An example of how to define functionality in a filetype plugin: > |
| |
| if !hasmapto('<Plug>JavaImport;') |
| map <buffer> <unique> <LocalLeader>i <Plug>JavaImport; |
| endif |
| noremap <buffer> <unique> <Plug>JavaImport; oimport ""<Left><Esc> |
| |
| |hasmapto()| is used to check if the user has already defined a map to |
| <Plug>JavaImport;. If not, then the filetype plugin defines the default |
| mapping. This starts with |<LocalLeader>|, which allows the user to select |
| the key(s) he wants filetype plugin mappings to start with. The default is a |
| backslash. |
| "<unique>" is used to give an error message if the mapping already exists or |
| overlaps with an existing mapping. |
| |:noremap| is used to avoid that any other mappings that the user has defined |
| interferes. You might want to use ":noremap <script>" to allow remapping |
| mappings defined in this script that start with <SID>. |
| |
| The user must have a chance to disable the mappings in a filetype plugin, |
| without disabling everything. Here is an example of how this is done for a |
| plugin for the mail filetype: > |
| |
| # Add mappings, unless the user didn't want this. |
| if !exists("g:no_plugin_maps") && !exists("g:no_mail_maps") |
| # Quote text by inserting "> " |
| if !hasmapto('<Plug>MailQuote;') |
| vmap <buffer> <LocalLeader>q <Plug>MailQuote; |
| nmap <buffer> <LocalLeader>q <Plug>MailQuote; |
| endif |
| vnoremap <buffer> <Plug>MailQuote; :s/^/> /<CR> |
| nnoremap <buffer> <Plug>MailQuote; :.,$s/^/> /<CR> |
| endif |
| |
| Two global variables are used: |
| |g:no_plugin_maps| disables mappings for all filetype plugins |
| |g:no_mail_maps| disables mappings for the "mail" filetype |
| |
| |
| USER COMMANDS |
| |
| To add a user command for a specific file type, so that it can only be used in |
| one buffer, use the "-buffer" argument to |:command|. Example: > |
| |
| command -buffer Make make %:r.s |
| |
| |
| VARIABLES |
| |
| A filetype plugin will be sourced for each buffer of the type it's for. Local |
| script variables will be shared between all invocations. Use local buffer |
| variables |b:var| if you want a variable specifically for one buffer. |
| |
| |
| FUNCTIONS |
| |
| When defining a function, this only needs to be done once. But the filetype |
| plugin will be sourced every time a file with this filetype will be opened. |
| This construct makes sure the function is only defined once: > |
| |
| if !exists("*Func") |
| def Func(arg) |
| ... |
| enddef |
| endif |
| < |
| Don't forget to use "noclear" with the `vim9script` command to avoid that the |
| function is deleted when the script is sourced a second time. |
| |
| |
| UNDO *undo_indent* *undo_ftplugin* |
| |
| When the user does ":setfiletype xyz" the effect of the previous filetype |
| should be undone. Set the b:undo_ftplugin variable to the commands that will |
| undo the settings in your filetype plugin. Example: > |
| |
| b:undo_ftplugin = "setlocal fo< com< tw< commentstring<" |
| \ .. "| unlet b:match_ignorecase b:match_words b:match_skip" |
| |
| Using ":setlocal" with "<" after the option name resets the option to its |
| global value. That is mostly the best way to reset the option value. |
| |
| For undoing the effect of an indent script, the b:undo_indent variable should |
| be set accordingly. |
| |
| Both these variables use legacy script syntax, not |Vim9| syntax. |
| |
| |
| FILE NAME |
| |
| The filetype must be included in the file name |ftplugin-name|. Use one of |
| these three forms: |
| |
| .../ftplugin/stuff.vim |
| .../ftplugin/stuff_foo.vim |
| .../ftplugin/stuff/bar.vim |
| |
| "stuff" is the filetype, "foo" and "bar" are arbitrary names. |
| |
| |
| FILETYPE DETECTION *plugin-filetype* |
| |
| If your filetype is not already detected by Vim, you should create a filetype |
| detection snippet in a separate file. It is usually in the form of an |
| autocommand that sets the filetype when the file name matches a pattern. |
| Example: > |
| |
| au BufNewFile,BufRead *.foo setlocal filetype=foofoo |
| |
| Write this single-line file as "ftdetect/foofoo.vim" in the first directory |
| that appears in 'runtimepath'. For Unix that would be |
| "~/.vim/ftdetect/foofoo.vim". The convention is to use the name of the |
| filetype for the script name. |
| |
| You can make more complicated checks if you like, for example to inspect the |
| contents of the file to recognize the language. Also see |new-filetype|. |
| |
| |
| SUMMARY *ftplugin-special* |
| |
| Summary of special things to use in a filetype plugin: |
| |
| <LocalLeader> Value of "maplocalleader", which the user defines as |
| the keys that filetype plugin mappings start with. |
| |
| map <buffer> Define a mapping local to the buffer. |
| |
| noremap <script> Only remap mappings defined in this script that start |
| with <SID>. |
| |
| setlocal Set an option for the current buffer only. |
| |
| command -buffer Define a user command local to the buffer. |
| |
| exists("*s:Func") Check if a function was already defined. |
| |
| Also see |plugin-special|, the special things used for all plugins. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *51.3* Writing a compiler plugin *write-compiler-plugin* |
| |
| A compiler plugin sets options for use with a specific compiler. The user can |
| load it with the |:compiler| command. The main use is to set the |
| 'errorformat' and 'makeprg' options. |
| |
| Easiest is to have a look at examples. This command will edit all the default |
| compiler plugins: > |
| |
| next $VIMRUNTIME/compiler/*.vim |
| |
| Type `:next` to go to the next plugin file. |
| |
| There are two special items about these files. First is a mechanism to allow |
| a user to overrule or add to the default file. The default files start with: > |
| |
| vim9script |
| if exists("g:current_compiler") |
| finish |
| endif |
| g:current_compiler = "mine" |
| |
| When you write a compiler file and put it in your personal runtime directory |
| (e.g., ~/.vim/compiler for Unix), you set the "current_compiler" variable to |
| make the default file skip the settings. |
| *:CompilerSet* |
| The second mechanism is to use ":set" for ":compiler!" and ":setlocal" for |
| ":compiler". Vim defines the ":CompilerSet" user command for this. However, |
| older Vim versions don't, thus your plugin should define it then. This is an |
| example: > |
| |
| if exists(":CompilerSet") != 2 |
| command -nargs=* CompilerSet setlocal <args> |
| endif |
| CompilerSet errorformat& " use the default 'errorformat' |
| CompilerSet makeprg=nmake |
| |
| When you write a compiler plugin for the Vim distribution or for a system-wide |
| runtime directory, use the mechanism mentioned above. When |
| "current_compiler" was already set by a user plugin nothing will be done. |
| |
| When you write a compiler plugin to overrule settings from a default plugin, |
| don't check "current_compiler". This plugin is supposed to be loaded |
| last, thus it should be in a directory at the end of 'runtimepath'. For Unix |
| that could be ~/.vim/after/compiler. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *51.4* Distributing Vim scripts *distribute-script* |
| |
| Vim users will look for scripts on the Vim website: http://www.vim.org. |
| If you made something that is useful for others, share it! |
| |
| Another place is github. But there you need to know where to find it! The |
| advantage is that most plugin managers fetch plugins from github. You'll have |
| to use your favorite search engine to find them. |
| |
| Vim scripts can be used on any system. However, there might not be a tar or |
| gzip command. If you want to pack files together and/or compress them the |
| "zip" utility is recommended. |
| |
| For utmost portability use Vim itself to pack scripts together. This can be |
| done with the Vimball utility. See |vimball|. |
| |
| It's good if you add a line to allow automatic updating. See |glvs-plugins|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| |
| Next chapter: |usr_52.txt| Write large plugins |
| |
| Copyright: see |manual-copyright| vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: |