This repository is mainly for the use with plug-in managers.
Have a look at the Screenshot Page.
The development happens in WolfgangMehner/vim-plugins.
- INSTALLATION
- RELEASE NOTES
- FILES
- ADDITIONAL TIPS
- CREDITS
C/C++-IDE for Vim/gVim. It is written to considerably speed up writing code in
a consistent style. This is done by inserting complete statements, idioms,
comments, and code snippets. These code fragments are provided in an extendible
template library. Syntax checking, compiling, running a program, running indent
or code checkers can be done with a keystroke. There are many additional hints
and options which can improve speed and comfort when writing C/C++.
See the help file csupport.txt
for more information.
This plug-in can be used with Vim version 7.x.
A system-wide installation for all users can also be done. This will have
further effects on how the plug-in works. For a step-by-step instruction, as
well as an explanation of the other consequences, please see the help file
doc/csupport.txt
or look up the documentation via:
:help csupport-system-wide
The subdirectories in the zip archive c-support.zip
mirror the directory
structure which is needed below the local installation directory $HOME/.vim/
(find the value of $HOME
with :echo $HOME
from inside Vim).
(1.0) Save the template files in $HOME/.vim/c-support/templates/Templates
if you have changed any of them.
(1.1) Copy the zip archive c-support.zip
to $HOME/.vim
and run
unzip c-support.zip
Afterwards, these files should exist:
$HOME/.vim/autoload/mmtemplates/...
$HOME/.vim/doc/...
$HOME/.vim/plugin/c.vim
(1.2) Loading of plug-in files must be enabled. If not use
:filetype plugin on
This is the minimal content of the file $HOME/.vimrc
. Create one if there
is none or use the files in $HOME/.vim/c-support/rc
as a starting point.
(1.3) Make the plug-in help accessible by typing the following command on the Vim command line:
:helptags $HOME/.vim/doc/
(1.4) Set at least some personal details. Use the map \ntw
inside a C/C++ buffer
or the menu entry:
C/C++ -> Snippets -> template setup wizard
It will help you set up the file _runtimepath_/templates/personal.templates
.
The file is read by all plug-ins supporting this feature to get your personal
details. Here is the minimal personalization (my settings as an example):
SetMacro( 'AUTHOR', 'Wolfgang Mehner' )
SetMacro( 'AUTHORREF', 'wm' )
SetMacro( 'EMAIL', 'wolfgang-mehner@web.de' )
SetMacro( 'COPYRIGHT', 'Copyright (c) |YEAR|, |AUTHOR|' )
Use the file $HOME/.vim/templates/c.templates
to customize or add to your
C/C++ template library. It can also be set up via the wizard.
(Read more about the template system in the plug-in documentation)
(1.5) Consider additional settings in the file $HOME/.vimrc
. The files
customization.vimrc
and customization.gvimrc
are replacements or extensions
for your .vimrc
and .gvimrc
. You may want to use parts of them. The files
are documented.
(1.6) To enable additional tools, add these lines to your $HOME/.vimrc
. To
enable the CMake and Doxygen tools, use:
let g:C_UseTool_cmake = 'yes'
let g:C_UseTool_doxygen = 'yes'
For enabling the Doxygen templates, see chapter 1.10.1 of the documentation:
:help csupport-doxygen-enable
The subdirectories in the zip archive c-support.zip
mirror the directory
structure which is needed below the local installation directory $HOME/vimfiles/
(find the value of $HOME
with :echo $HOME
from inside Vim).
(2.0) Save the template files in $HOME/vimfiles/c-support/templates/Templates
if
you have changed any of them.
(2.1) Copy the zip archive c-support.zip
to $HOME/vimfiles
and run
unzip c-support.zip
Afterwards, these files should exist:
$HOME/vimfiles/autoload/mmtemplates/...
$HOME/vimfiles/doc/...
$HOME/vimfiles/plugin/c.vim
(2.2) Loading of plug-in files must be enabled. If not use
:filetype plugin on
This is the minimal content of the file $HOME/_vimrc
. Create one if there
is none or use the files in $HOME/vimfiles/c-support/rc
as a starting point.
(2.3) Make the plug-in help accessible by typing the following command on the Vim command line:
:helptags $HOME\vimfiles\doc\
(2.4) Set at least some personal details. Use the map \ntw
inside a C/C++ buffer
or the menu entry:
C/C++ -> Snippets -> template setup wizard
It will help you set up the file _runtimepath_/templates/personal.templates
.
The file is read by all plug-ins supporting this feature to get your personal
details. Here is the minimal personalization (my settings as an example):
SetMacro( 'AUTHOR', 'Wolfgang Mehner' )
SetMacro( 'AUTHORREF', 'wm' )
SetMacro( 'EMAIL', 'wolfgang-mehner@web.de' )
SetMacro( 'COPYRIGHT', 'Copyright (c) |YEAR|, |AUTHOR|' )
Use the file $HOME/vimfiles/templates/c.templates
to customize or add to
your C/C++ template library. It can also be set up via the wizard.
(Read more about the template system in the plug-in documentation)
(2.5) Consider additional settings in the file $HOME/_vimrc
. The files
customization.vimrc
and customization.gvimrc
are replacements or extensions
for your _vimrc
and _gvimrc
. You may want to use parts of them. The files
are documented.
(2.6) To enable additional tools, add these lines to your $HOME/_vimrc
. To
enable the CMake and Doxygen tools, use:
let g:C_UseTool_cmake = 'yes'
let g:C_UseTool_doxygen = 'yes'
For enabling the Doxygen templates, see chapter 1.10.1 of the documentation:
:help csupport-doxygen-enable
(2.7) Make sure the shell is set up correctly. The options shell
,
shellcmdflag
, shellquote
, and shellxquote
must be set consistently.
Compare :help csupport-troubleshooting
.
There are a lot of features and options which can be used and influenced:
- use of the extendible template files and tags
- surround marked blocks with statements
- using and managing personal code snippets
- generate/remove multiline comments
- picking up prototypes
- C/C++ dictionaries for keyword completion
- (re)moving the root menu
Actions differ for different modes. Please read the documentation:
:help csupport
Any problems? See the TROUBLESHOOTING section at the end of the help file
doc/csupport.txt
.
- The templates which are inserted into new files as file skeletons can be
specified in the templates library, via properties:
C::FileSkeleton::Header
,Cpp::FileSkeleton::Header
,C::FileSkeleton::Source
,Cpp::FileSkeleton::Source
- Fix a problem with the path when setting
Run->executable to run
. - New and reworked templates. Change statement templates.
Note: The filetype plug-ins have been moved, and are thus not loaded
automatically anymore. Copy them from c-support/rc
to ftplugin
,
or add the commands there to your own filetype plug-ins.
Note: Some configuration for *.i
, *.ii
, and quickfix files has been removed.
See c-support/rc/customization.vimrc
for how to add them to your configuration
files.
Note: This reworks most of the statement templates. The loop and if templates which do not introduce a block have been remove entirely, since the templates without blocks save barely any typing. They do not make much sense in visual mode either. Removing them allows us to clean up the menu and use more consistent maps.
-> see file c-support/doc/ChangeLog
README.md
This file.
autoload/mmtemplates/*
The template system.
autoload/mmtoolbox/*
The toolbox (cmake, doxygen, make, ...).
doc/csupport.txt
The help file for C support.
doc/templatesupport.txt
The help file for the template system.
doc/toolbox*.txt
The help files for the toolbox.
plugin/c.vim
The C/C++ plug-in for Vim/gVim.
c-support/codesnippets/*
Some C/C++ code snippets as a starting point.
c-support/scripts/wrapper.sh
The wrapper script for the use of a xterm.
c-support/templates/Templates
C and C++ main template file.
c-support/templates/*.templates
Several dependent template files.
c-support/wordlists/c-c++-keywords.list
All C and C++ keywords (also in word.list).
c-support/wordlists/k+r.list
K&R-Book: Words from the table of content.
They appear frequently in comments.
c-support/wordlists/stl_index.list
STL: method and type names.
The following files and extensions are for convenience only. c.vim will work without them. The settings are explained in the files themselves.
ftdetect/template.vim
ftplugin/template.vim
syntax/template.vim
Additional files for working with templates.
c-support/doc/c-hotkeys.pdf
Hotkey reference card.
c-support/doc/ChangeLog
Complete change log.
c-support/rc/customization.ctags
Additional settings for use in .ctags to enable
navigation through makefiles and qmake files with the
plug-in taglist.vim.
c-support/rc/customization.gvimrc
Additional settings for use in .gvimrc:
hot keys, mouse settings, fonts, ...
The file is commented. Append it to your .gvimrc if you
like.
c-support/rc/customization.indent.pro
Additional settings for use in .indent.pro.
See the indent manual.
c-support/rc/customization.vimrc
Additional settings for use in .vimrc:
incremental search, tabstop, hot keys,
font, use of dictionaries, ...
The file is commented. Append it to your .vimrc if you
like.
c-support/rc/c.vim
c-support/rc/cpp.vim
Example filetype plug-in for C/C++:
defines additional maps
c-support/rc/make.vim
Access hotkeys for make(1) in makefiles.
c-support/rc/*.templates
Sample template files for customization. Used by the
template setup wizard.
c-support/rc/project/in.vim
Example for using the project plug-in's "in=" option
(see :help project-syntax) to set up the toolbox. For
example, a project's Makefile could be set up this way.
Most of the people who have contributed ideas, patches, and bug reports, is thanked in the file ChangeLog.
I would like to especially thank my son Wolfgang Mehner, who has repeatedly proposed improvements and introduced new ideas.
Some ideas are taken from the following documents:
- Recommended C Style and Coding Standards (Indian Hill Style Guide) (read in html or read as pdf)
- Programming in C++, Ellemtel Telecommunication Systems Laboratories (read as pdf)
- C++ Coding Standard, Todd Hoff (read in html)
The splint error format is taken from the file splint.vim (Vim standard distribution).
This plug-in has been developed by Fritz Mehner, who maintained it until 2015.
... finally
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832), the greatest of the German poets, about LINUX, Vim/gVim and other great tools (Ok, almost.) :
Ein Mann, der recht zu wirken denkt, Who on efficient work is bent,
Muß auf das beste Werkzeug halten. Must choose the fittest instrument.
Faust, Teil 1, Vorspiel auf dem Theater Faust, Part 1, Prologue for the Theatre