*editorconfig.txt* File: editorconfig.txt Version: 1.1.1 Maintainer: EditorConfig Team Description: EditorConfig vim plugin License: Copyright (c) 2011-2019 EditorConfig Team All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. CONTENTS~ *editorconfig-contents* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. Overview |editorconfig-overview| 2. Installation |editorconfig-installation| 3. Commands |editorconfig-commands| 4. Settings |editorconfig-settings| 5. Advanced |editorconfig-advanced| OVERVIEW~ *editorconfig-overview* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is the EditorConfig plugin for vim. INSTALLATION~ *editorconfig-installation* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Follow the instructions in the README.md file to install this plugin. COMMANDS~ *editorconfig-commands* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- *:EditorConfigReload* Command: :EditorConfigReload Reload the EditorConfig conf files. When `.editorconfig` files are modified, this command could prevent you to reload the current edited file to load the new configuration. SETTINGS~ *editorconfig-settings* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- *g:EditorConfig_core_mode* Specify the mode of EditorConfig core. Generally it is OK to leave this option empty. Currently, the supported modes are "vim_core" (default) and "external_command". vim_core: Use the included VimScript EditorConfig Core. external_command: Run external EditorConfig Core. If "g:EditorConfig_core_mode" is not specified, this plugin will automatically choose "vim_core". If you choose "external_command" mode, you must also set |g:EditorConfig_exec_path|. Changes to "g:EditorConfig_core_mode" will not take effect until Vim is restarted. *b:EditorConfig_disable* This is a buffer-local variable that disables the EditorConfig plugin for a single buffer. Example: Disable EditorConfig for the current buffer: > let b:EditorConfig_disable = 1 < Example: Disable EditorConfig for all git commit messages: > au FileType gitcommit let b:EditorConfig_disable = 1 < *g:EditorConfig_exclude_patterns* This is a list contains file path patterns which will be ignored by EditorConfig plugin. When the path of the opened buffer (i.e. "expand('%:p')") matches any of the patterns in the list, EditorConfig will not load for this file. The default is an empty list. Example: Avoid loading EditorConfig for any remote files over ssh > let g:EditorConfig_exclude_patterns = ['scp://.*'] < *g:EditorConfig_exec_path* The file path to the EditorConfig core executable. You can set this value in your |vimrc| like this: > let g:EditorConfig_exec_path = 'Path to your EditorConfig Core executable' < The default value is empty. If "g:EditorConfig_exec_path" is not set, the plugin will use the "vim_core" mode regardless of the setting of |g:EditorConfig_core_mode|. Changes to "g:EditorConfig_exec_path" will not take effect until Vim is restarted. *g:EditorConfig_max_line_indicator* The way to show the line where the maximal length is reached. Accepted values are "line", "fill" and "exceeding", otherwise there will be no max line indicator. "line": the right column of the max line length column will be highlighted, made possible by adding "+1" to 'colorcolumn'. "fill": all the columns to the right of the max line length column will be highlighted, made possible by setting 'colorcolumn' to a list of numbers starting from "max_line_length + 1" to the number of columns on the screen. "exceeding": the right column of the max line length column will be highlighted on lines that exceed the max line length, made possible by adding a match for the ColorColumn group. "none": no max line length indicator will be shown. This is the recommended value when you do not want any indicator to be shown, but values other than "line" or "fill" would also work as "none". To set this option, add any of the following lines to your |vimrc| file: > let g:EditorConfig_max_line_indicator = "line" let g:EditorConfig_max_line_indicator = "fill" let g:EditorConfig_max_line_indicator = "exceeding" let g:EditorConfig_max_line_indicator = "none" < The default value is "line". *g:EditorConfig_preserve_formatoptions* Set this to 1 if you don't want your formatoptions modified when max_line_length is set: > let g:EditorConfig_preserve_formatoptions = 1 < This option defaults to 0. *g:EditorConfig_softtabstop_space* When spaces are used for indent, Vim's 'softtabstop' feature will make the backspace key delete one indent level. If you turn off that feature (by setting the option to 0), only a single space will be deleted. This option defaults to 1, which enables 'softtabstop' and uses the 'shiftwidth' value for it. You can also set this to -1 to automatically follow the current 'shiftwidth' value (since Vim 7.3.693). Or set this to [] if EditorConfig should not touch 'softtabstop' at all. *g:EditorConfig_softtabstop_tab* When tabs are used for indent, Vim's 'softtabstop' feature only applies to backspacing over existing runs of spaces. This option defaults to 1, so backspace will delete one indent level worth of spaces; -1 does the same but automatically follows the current 'shiftwidth' value. Set this to 0 to have backspace delete just a single space character. Or set this to [] if EditorConfig should not touch 'softtabstop' at all. *g:EditorConfig_verbose* Set this to 1 if you want debug info printed: > let g:EditorConfig_verbose = 1 < ADVANCED~ *editorconfig-advanced* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- *editorconfig-hook* *EditorConfig#AddNewHook()* While this plugin offers several builtin supported properties (as mentioned here: https://github.com/editorconfig/editorconfig-vim#supported-properties), we are also able to add our own hooks to support additional EditorConfig properties, including those not in the EditorConfig standard. For example, we are working on an Objective-C project, and all our "*.m" files should be Objective-C source files. However, vim sometimes detect "*.m" files as MATLAB source files, which causes incorrect syntax highlighting, code indentation, etc. To solve the case, we could write the following code into the |vimrc| file: > function! FiletypeHook(config) if has_key(a:config, 'vim_filetype') let &filetype = a:config['vim_filetype'] endif return 0 " Return 0 to show no error happened endfunction call editorconfig#AddNewHook(function('FiletypeHook')) < And add the following code to your .editorconfig file: > [*.m] vim_filetype = objc < Then try to open an Objective-C file, you will find the |filetype| is set to "objc". vim:ft=help:tw=78