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2022-05-19 11:12:17 -04:00
*mru.txt* Plugin for accessing most recently used files
Author: Yegappan Lakshmanan (yegappan AT yahoo DOT com)
For Vim version 7.0 and above
Last change: January 13, 2022
==============================================================================
*mru-license*
License: MIT License
Copyright (c) 2003-2021 Yegappan Lakshmanan
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to
deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the
rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS
IN THE SOFTWARE.
==============================================================================
CONTENTS~
1. Overview |mru-overview|
2. Installation |mru-installation|
3. Usage |mru-usage|
4. Configuration |mru-configuration|
5. FZF Integration |mru-fzf|
==============================================================================
1. Overview *mru-overview*
The Most Recently Used (MRU) plugin provides an easy access to a list of
recently opened/edited files in Vim. This plugin automatically stores the
file names as you open/edit them in Vim.
This plugin works with both Vim and Neovim and will work on all the platforms
where Vim/Neovim are supported. This plugin will work in both console and GUI
Vim. This version of the MRU plugin needs Vim 7.0 and above.
The recently used filenames are stored in a file specified by the Vim
MRU_File variable.
The Github repository for the MRU plugin is available at:
https://github.com/yegappan/mru
==============================================================================
2. Installation *mru-installation*
You can use any one of the Vim plugin managers (dein.vim, pathogen, vam,
vim-plug, volt, Vundle, etc.) to install and manage this plugin.
Alternatively, you can also manually download and install the plugin
using the following steps.
1. Download the mru.zip file from https://github.com/yegappan/mru/releases
2. Unzip the mru.zip file into the $HOME/.vim directory for Linux/MacOS/Unix
systems or the $HOMEPATH/vimfiles directory for MS-Windows. After this
step, you should have the following files (the directory structure should
be preserved):
plugin/mru.vim - MRU plugin
doc/mru.txt - documentation (help) file
3. Start Vim and run the ":helptags ALL" command to process the help file.
Without this step, you cannot jump to the MRU help topics.
4. Restart Vim.
5. You can use the |:MRU| command to list and edit the recently used files.
In GUI Vim, you can use the 'File->Recent Files' menu to access the
recently used files.
To uninstall the MRU plugin, either use the uninstall command provided by the
plugin manager or manually remove the plugin/mru.vim, and doc/mru.txt
files from either the $HOME/.vim or $HOME/vimfiles directory.
You can also install the latest version of the plugin directly from github
using the following steps (in Vim 8.0 and above): >
$ mkdir -p $HOME/.vim/pack/downloads/start/mru
$ cd $HOME/.vim/pack/downloads/start/mru
$ git clone https://github.com/yegappan/mru.git
<
For Neovim: >
$ mkdir -p $HOME/.config/nvim/pack/downloads/start/mru
$ cd $HOME/.config/nvim/pack/downloads/start/mru
$ git clone https://github.com/yegappan/mru.git
<
==============================================================================
3. Usage *mru-usage*
*:MRU*
To list and edit files from the Most Recently Used (MRU) list, you can use the
":MRU" command. The |:MRU| command displays the list of recently used files
in a temporary Vim window. If the MRU window is already opened, then the MRU
list currently displayed in the window is refreshed.
*:MRUToggle*
Alternatively, you can use the ":MRUToggle" command to toggle (open or close)
the MRU window. If the window is already opened, then running the ":MRUToggle"
command will close the window.
If you are using GUI Vim, then the names of the recently edited files are
added to the "File->Recent Files" menu. You can select the name of a file
from this sub-menu to edit the file.
You can use the normal Vim commands to move around in the MRU window. You
cannot make changes in the MRU window.
In the MRU window, the following keys can be used:
<Enter> - open the file under cursor
o - open the file under cursor in a horizontally split window
<S-Enter> - idem
O - open the file under cursor in a vertically split window
v - open the file under cursor in read-only mode
t - open the file under cursor in a tab page
p - open the file under cursor in the preview window
u - update (refresh) the MRU list
d - delete the file name under cursor from the MRU list
q - close the MRU window
<Esc> - idem
You can select a file name to edit by pressing the <Enter> key or by double
clicking the left mouse button on a file name. The selected file will be
opened. If the file is already opened in a window, the cursor will be moved
to that window. Otherwise, the file is opened in the previous window. If the
previous window has a modified buffer or is the preview window or is used by
some other plugin, then the file is opened in a new window.
You can press the 'o' key to open the file name under the cursor in the
MRU window in a new window. You can also press <Shift-Enter> instead of 'o'
to open the file in a new window.
To open a file from the MRU window in read-only mode (view), press the 'v'
key.
To open a file from the MRU window in a new tab, press the 't' key. If the
file is already opened in a window in the current or in another tab, then
the cursor is moved to that tab. Otherwise, a new tab is opened.
You can open multiple files from the MRU window by specifying a count before
pressing '<Enter>' or 'v' or 'o' or 't'. You can also visually (using
linewise visual mode) select multiple filenames and invoke the commands to
open the files. Each selected file will be opened in a separate window or
tab.
You can press the 'u' key in the MRU window to update/refresh the file list.
This is useful if you keep the MRU window open always.
You can press the 'd' key to remove the entry under the cursor in the MRU
window from the MRU list.
You can close the MRU window by pressing the 'q' key or the <Esc> key or
using one of the Vim window commands.
By default, the MRU window is opened as the bottom-most window. If you are
using Vim version 8.0 and above, then you can use command modifiers like
|:topleft| or |:botright| or |:vertical| with the :MRU command to control
where the window is opened. Example: >
:topleft MRU " horizontally split topmost window
:botright MRU " horizontally split bottommost window
:vertical topleft MRU " vertically split far-left window
:vertical botright MRU " vertically split far-right window
<
By default, the height of the MRU window is 8 or the value specified by the
g:MRU_Window_Height variable. You can pass a count to the :MRU command to use
a different height. Example: >
:15MRU
:vertical topleft 20MRU
<
To display only files matching a pattern from the MRU list in the MRU window,
you can specify a pattern to the |:MRU| command. Example: >
:MRU mystr
<
The above command displays only the file names containing the string "mystr"
in them. When you specify a partial file name and only one matching filename
is found, then the |:MRU| command will edit that file.
The |:MRU| command supports command-line completion of file names from
the MRU list. You can enter a partial file name and then press <Tab>
or <Ctrl-D> to complete or list all the matching file names. Note that
after typing the |:MRU| command, you have to enter a space before completing
the file names with <Tab>.
When the search pattern supplied to the |:MRU| command matches only one file,
then the file will be opened in the current window if it contains an
unmodified buffer. Otherwise it will be opened in a new window. You can use
command-line completion to select a file and directly open the file without
opening the MRU window. If you are using Vim version 8.0 and above, you can
use the command modifiers (|:leftabove|, |:rightbelow|, |:vertical|, |:tab|,
etc.) to open the file in a horizontally or vertically split window or a tab
page. Example: >
:topleft MRU myfile.py " horizontally split topmost window
:botright MRU myfile.py " horizontally split bottommost window
:vertical MRU myfile.py " vertically split window
:vertical topleft MRU myfile.py " vertically split far-left window
:vertical botright MRU myfile.py " vertically split far-right window
:tab MRU myfile.py " new tab page
<
When a file supplied to the |:MRU| command is not present in the MRU list,
but it is a readable file, then the file will be opened (even though it is
not present in the MRU list). This is useful if you want to open a file
present in the same directory as a file in the MRU list. You can use the
command-line completion of the |:MRU| command to complete the full path of a
file and then modify the path to open another file present in the same path.
Whenever the MRU list changes, the MRU file is updated with the latest MRU
list. When you have multiple instances of Vim running at the same time, the
latest MRU list will show up in all the instances of Vim.
The MRUFilename syntax group is used to highlight the file names in the MRU
window. By default, this syntax group is linked to the Identifier highlight
group. You can change the highlight group by adding the following line in
your .vimrc:
>
highlight link MRUFileName LineNr
<
The MRU buffer uses the 'mru file type. You can use this file type to add
custom auto commands, syntax highlighting, etc.
*:MruRefresh*
After using the MRU plugin for a period of time, the MRU list may contain
files which are no longer present in the system. The |:MruRefresh| command can
be used to remove non-existing files from the MRU list.
*MruGetFiles()*
The MruGetFiles() function can be used to get the current list of file names
in the MRU list as a |List|. This can be used with Ex commands that accept one
or more file names as argument. Some example uses for this function are below:
>
" search for 'my_text' in all the files in the MRU list
:vimgrep my_text `=MruGetFiles()`
" search for 'my_text' in the files ending in .java in the MRU list
:vimgrep my_text `=MruGetFiles('.java')`
" add all the .py files in the MRU list to the argument list
:n `=MruGetFiles('.py')`
" Add the files in MRU list to a quickfix list
:call setqflist([], ' ', {'efm' : '%f', 'lines' : MruGetFiles()})
<
==============================================================================
4. Configuration *mru-configuration*
The MRU plugin supports many configurable features. These can be enabled or
disabled by setting one or more variables in your .vimrc file using the |:let|
command. For Neovim, set these variables in the $HOME/.config/nvim/init.vim
file. A summary of these variables is below:
|MRU_File| name of the file containing the MRU list
|MRU_Max_Entries| size of the MRU list
|MRU_Exclude_Files| pattern to exclude files from MRU list
|MRU_Include_Files| pattern to include files in the MRU list
|MRU_Window_Height| height of the MRU window
|MRU_Use_Current_Window| use current window to display MRU list
|MRU_Auto_Close| close the MRU window when a file is selected
|MRU_Window_Open_Always| open the MRU window even for a single file
|MRU_Open_File_Use_Tabs| open files in separate tab pages
|MRU_FuzzyMatch| use fuzzy match for filtering file names
|MRU_Add_Menu| add MRU files to the "Recent Files" menu
|MRU_Max_Menu_Entries| maximum number of entries in the MRU menu
|MRU_Max_Submenu_Entries| maximum number of entries in the MRU submenu
|MRU_Set_Alternate_File| set the alternate file on plugin startup
|MRU_Filename_Format| patterns to populate and parse file names in
the MRU window
These variables are described in more detail below.
*MRU_File*
The list of recently edited file names is stored in the file specified by the
MRU_File variable. The default setting for this variable is
$HOME/.vim_mru_files for Unix-like systems and $USERPROFILE/_vim_mru_files
for MS-Windows systems. You can change this variable to point to a file by
adding the following line to the .vimrc file:
>
let MRU_File = 'd:\myhome\_vim_mru_files'
<
*MRU_Max_Entries*
By default, the plugin will remember the names of the last 100 used files.
As you edit more files, old file names will be removed from the MRU list.
You can set the 'MRU_Max_Entries' variable to remember more file names. For
example, to remember 1000 most recently used file names, you can use
>
let MRU_Max_Entries = 1000
<
*MRU_Exclude_Files*
By default, all the edited file names are added to the MRU list. If you want
to exclude file names matching a pattern, then you can set the
MRU_Exclude_Files variable to a Vim regular expression. If any part of a
file name matches the regular expression, then it is not added to the MRU
list. By default, this variable is set to an empty string. For example, to
not include files in the temporary (/tmp, /var/tmp and D:\temp) directories,
you can set the MRU_Exclude_Files variable to
>
let MRU_Exclude_Files = '^/tmp/.*\|^/var/tmp/.*' " For Unix
let MRU_Exclude_Files = '^D:\\temp\\.*' " For MS-Windows
<
The specified pattern should be a Vim regular expression pattern. Note that
you can specify multiple patterns using '\|'.
*MRU_Include_Files*
If you want to add only file names matching a pattern to the MRU list, then
you can set the MRU_Include_Files variable. This variable should be set to a
Vim regular expression pattern. If the regular expression matches any part
of a file name, then it is added to the MRU list. For example, to add only
.c and .h files to the MRU list, you can set this variable as below:
>
let MRU_Include_Files = '\.c$\|\.h$'
<
By default, MRU_Include_Files is set to an empty string and all the edited
filenames are added to the MRU list. Note that you can specify multiple
patterns using '\|'.
*MRU_Window_Height*
The default height of the MRU window is 8. You can set the MRU_Window_Height
variable to change the window height. You can also set the height of the MRU
window by passing a count to the :MRU command.
>
let MRU_Window_Height = 15
<
*MRU_Use_Current_Window*
By default, when the |:MRU| command is invoked, the MRU list will be displayed
in a new window. Instead, if you want the MRU plugin to reuse the current
window, then you can set the 'MRU_Use_Current_Window' variable to one.
>
let MRU_Use_Current_Window = 1
<
The MRU plugin will reuse the current window. When a file name is selected,
the file is also opened in the current window.
*MRU_Auto_Close*
When you select a file from the MRU window, the MRU window will be
automatically closed and the selected file will be opened in the previous
window. You can set the 'MRU_Auto_Close' variable to zero to keep the MRU
window open.
>
let MRU_Auto_Close = 0
<
*MRU_Window_Open_Always*
When a search pattern is supplied to the :MRU command, the MRU window is
opened if multiple files matching the pattern are found in the MRU list. If
only one matching file is found, instead of opening the MRU window the file is
directly opened. To force open the MRU window always, you can set the
MRU_Window_Open_Always variable to 1. By default this variable is set to 0.
>
let MRU_Window_Open_Always = 1
<
*MRU_Open_File_Use_Tabs*
When opening a file from the MRU list, the file is opened in the current
tab. If the selected file has to be opened in a tab always, then set the
following variable to 1. If the file is already opened in a tab, then the
cursor will be moved to that tab.
>
let MRU_Open_File_Use_Tabs = 1
<
*MRU_FuzzyMatch*
The :MRU command accepts a string that is used to filter the file names
displayed in the MRU window. The MRU command also supports command-line
completion using the supplied string. If Vim supports fuzzy matching
(supported from Vim 8.2.1665), then the :MRU command will fuzzy match the
supplied string against the file names. Otherwise it will use regular
expression matching. To always use regular expression matching, you can set
the MRU_FuzzyMatch variable to 0:
>
let MRU_FuzzyMatch = 0
<
*MRU_Add_Menu*
If you don't use the "File->Recent Files" menu and want to disable it,
then you can set the 'MRU_Add_Menu' variable to zero. By default, the
menu is enabled.
>
let MRU_Add_Menu = 0
<
*MRU_Max_Menu_Entries*
If too many file names are present in the MRU list, then updating the MRU
menu to list all the file names makes Vim slow. To avoid this, the
MRU_Max_Menu_Entries variable controls the number of file names to show in
the MRU menu. By default, this is set to 10. You can change this to show
more entries in the menu.
>
let MRU_Max_Menu_Entries = 20
<
*MRU_Max_Submenu_Entries*
If many file names are present in the MRU list, then the MRU menu is split
into sub-menus. Each sub-menu contains MRU_Max_Submenu_Entries file names.
The default setting for this is 10. You can change this to increase the
number of file names displayed in a single sub-menu:
>
let MRU_Max_Submenu_Entries = 15
<
*MRU_Set_Alternate_File*
When the MRU plugin starts up, if the MRU_Set_Alternate_File variable is set
to 1, then it sets the alternate file (|alternate-file|) to the first file in
the MRU list. You can edit this file using the ":e #" command. By default this
variable is set to 0. You can enable this behavior, by setting the
MRU_Set_Alternate_File variable to 1:
>
let MRU_Set_Alternate_File = 1
<
*MRU_Filename_Format*
In the MRU window, the filenames are displayed in two parts. The first part
contains the file name without the path and the second part contains the
full path to the file in parenthesis. This format is controlled by the
MRU_Filename_Format variable. If you prefer to change this to some other
format, then you can modify the MRU_Filename_Format variable.
The MRU_Filename_Format variable contains a |Dict| with the following keys:
formatter: a string value containing an expression that specifies how to
split/format the filename. In the expression v:val refers to the
complete path to a file in the MRU list.
parser : a string value containing an regular expression that specifies
how to read the filename back from a line in the MRU window.
syntax : a string value with a regular expression that matches the part to
be highlighted in the MRU window.
For example, to display the full path of the files without splitting it, you
can set this variable as shown below:
>
let MRU_Filename_Format = {
\ 'formatter':'v:val',
\ 'parser':'.*',
\ 'syntax': '[^/\\]\+$'}
<
==============================================================================
5. FZF Integration *mru-fzf*
You can use the MRU plugin with FZF (command-line fuzzy finder). You can
download and install FZF from https://github.com/junegunn/fzf.
To select a file from the MRU file list using FZF, run the following command:
>
:FZFMru
<
This will invoke FZF to select a file from the MRU list.
==============================================================================
vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help: