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# Automated tag generation and syntax highlighting in Vim
[Vim] [vim] has long been my favorite text editor and combined with [Exuberant
Ctags] [exuberant_ctags] it has the potential to provide most of what I expect
from an [integrated development environment] [ide]. Exuberant Ctags is the
latest incarnation of a [family of computer programs] [ctags] that scan
source code files to create an index of identifiers (tags) and where they are
defined. Vim uses this index (a so-called tags file) to enable you to jump to
the definition of any identifier using the [Control-\]][jump_to_tag] mapping.
When you're familiar with integrated development environments you may recognize
this feature as "Go-to definition". One advantage of the combination of Vim and
Exuberant Ctags over integrated development environments is that Vim supports
syntax highlighting for [over 500 file types] [vim_support] (!) and Exuberant
Ctags can generate tags for [over 40 file types] [ctags_support] as well...
There's just one problem: You have to manually keep your tags files up-to-date
and this turns out to be a royal pain in the ass! So I set out to write a Vim
plug-in that would do this boring work for me. When I finished the plug-in's
basic functionality (one automatic command and a call to [system()][system]
later) I became interested in dynamic syntax highlighting, so I added that as
well to see if it would work -- surprisingly well I'm happy to report!
## Install & first use
Unzip the most recent [ZIP archive] [latest_zip] file inside your Vim profile
directory (usually this is `~/.vim` on UNIX and `%USERPROFILE%\vimfiles` on
Windows), restart Vim and try it out: Edit any file type supported by Exuberant
Ctags and within ten seconds the plug-in should create/update your tags file
(`~/.vimtags` on UNIX, `~/_vimtags` on Windows) with the tags defined in the
file you just edited! This means that whatever file you're editing in Vim (as
long as its on the local file system), tags will always be available by the
time you need them!
Additionally if the file you just opened is a C, Lua, PHP, Python or Vim source
file you should also notice that the function and type names defined in the
file have been syntax highlighted.
If the plug-in warns you that `ctags` isn't installed you can download it from
its [homepage] [exuberant_ctags], or if you're running Debian/Ubuntu you can
install it by executing the following shell command:
$ sudo apt-get install exuberant-ctags
## Configuration
The plug-in is intended to work without configuration but can be customized by
changing the following options:
### The `g:easytags_cmd` option
The plug-in will try to determine the location where Exuberant Ctags is
installed on its own but this might not always work because any given
executable named `ctags` in your `$PATH` might not in fact be Exuberant Ctags
but some older, more primitive `ctags` implementation which doesn't support the
same command-line options and thus breaks the `easytags.vim` plug-in. If this
is the case you can set the global variable `g:easytags_cmd` to the location
where you've installed Exuberant Ctags, e.g.:
:let g:easytags_cmd = '/usr/local/bin/ctags'
### The `g:easytags_file` option
As mentioned above the plug-in will store your tags in `~/.vimtags` on UNIX and
`~/_vimtags` on Windows. To change the location of this file, set the global
variable `g:easytags_file`, e.g.:
:let g:easytags_file = '~/.vim/tags'
A leading `~` in the `g:easytags_file` variable is expanded to your current home
directory (`$HOME` on UNIX, `%USERPROFILE%` on Windows).
### The `g:easytags_always_enabled` option
By default the plug-in automatically generates and highlights tags when you
stop typing for a few seconds (this works using the [CursorHold][cursorhold]
automatic command). This means that when you edit a file, the dynamic
highlighting won't appear until you pause for a moment. If you don't like this
you can configure the plug-in to always enable dynamic highlighting:
:let g:easytags_always_enabled = 1
Be warned that after setting this option you'll probably notice why it's
disabled by default: Every time you edit a file in Vim, the plug-in will first
run Exuberant Ctags and then highlight the tags, and this slows Vim down quite
a lot. I have some ideas on how to improve this latency by running Exuberant
Ctags in the background (see my [shell.vim][shell] plug-in) so stay tuned!
Note: If you change this option it won't apply until you restart Vim, so you'll
have to set this option in your [vimrc script][vimrc].
### The `g:easytags_on_cursorhold` option
As I explained above the plug-in by default doesn't update or highlight your
tags until you stop typing for a moment. The plug-in tries hard to do the least
amount of work possible in this break but it might still interrupt your
workflow. If it does you can disable the periodic update:
:let g:easytags_on_cursorhold = 0
Note: Like the `g:easytags_always_enabled` option, if you change this option it
won't apply until you restart Vim, so you'll have to set this option in
your [vimrc script][vimrc].
### The `g:easytags_resolve_links` option
UNIX has [symbolic links] [symlinks] and [hard links] [hardlinks], both of
which conflict with the concept of having one unique location for every
identifier. With regards to hard links there's not much anyone can do, but
because I use symbolic links quite a lot I've added this option. It's disabled
by default since it has a small performance impact and might not do what
unknowing users expect it to: When you enable this option the plug-in will
resolve symbolic links in pathnames, which means your tags file will only
contain entries with [canonical pathnames] [canon]. To enable this option
(which I strongly suggest doing when you run UNIX and use symbolic links)
execute the following Vim command:
:let g:easytags_resolve_links = 1
## Troubleshooting
### The plug-in complains that Exuberant Ctags isn't installed
After a Mac OS X user found out the hard way that the `ctags` executable isn't
always Exuberant Ctags and we spend a few hours debugging the problem I added
proper version detection: The plug-in executes `ctags --version` when Vim is
started to verify that Exuberant Ctags 5.5 or newer is installed. If it isn't
Vim will show the following message on startup:
easytags.vim: Plug-in not loaded because Exuberant Ctags isn't installed!
Please download & install Exuberant Ctags from http://ctags.sf.net
If the installed Exuberant Ctags version is too old the plug-in will complain:
easytags.vim: Plug-in not loaded because Exuberant Ctags 5.5
or newer is required while you have version %s installed!
If you have the right version of Exuberant Ctags installed but the plug-in
still complains, try executing the following command from inside Vim:
:!which ctags
If this doesn't print the location where you installed Exuberant Ctags it means
your system already had a `ctags` executable but it isn't compatible with
Exuberant Ctags 5.5 and you'll need to set the `g:easytags_cmd` option (see
above) so the plug-in knows which `ctags` to run.
### Vim locks up while the plug-in is running
Once or twice now in several years I've experienced Exuberant Ctags getting
into an infinite loop when given garbage input. In my case this happened by
accident a few days ago :-|. Because my plug-in executes `ctags` in the
foreground this will block Vim indefinitely! If this happens you might be
able to kill `ctags` by pressing [Control-C][control_c] but if that doesn't
work you can also kill it without stopping Vim using a task manager or the
`pkill` command:
$ pkill -KILL ctags
If Vim seems very slow and you suspect this plug-in might be the one to blame,
increase Vim's verbosity level:
:set vbs=1
Every time the plug-in executes it will time how long the execution takes and
add the results to Vim's message history, which you can view by executing the
[:messages][messages] command.
## Contact
If you have questions, bug reports, suggestions, etc. the author can be
contacted at <peter@peterodding.com>. The latest version is available at
<http://peterodding.com/code/vim/easytags/> and
<http://github.com/xolox/vim-easytags>. If you like this plug-in please vote
for it on [www.vim.org] [vim_scripts_entry].
## License
This software is licensed under the [MIT license] [mit_license].
© 2010 Peter Odding <<peter@peterodding.com>>.
[canon]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canonicalization
[control_c]: http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/pattern.html#CTRL-C
[ctags]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ctags
[ctags_support]: http://ctags.sourceforge.net/languages.html
[cursorhold]: http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/autocmd.html#CursorHold
[exuberant_ctags]: http://ctags.sourceforge.net/
[hardlinks]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_link
[ide]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrated_development_environment
[jump_to_tag]: http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/tagsrch.html#CTRL-]
[latest_zip]: http://peterodding.com/code/vim/downloads/easytags
[messages]: http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/message.html#:messages
[mit_license]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIT_License
[shell]: http://peterodding.com/code/vim/shell/
[symlinks]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbolic_link
[system]: http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/eval.html#system()
[vim]: http://www.vim.org/
[vim_scripts_entry]: http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=3114
[vim_support]: http://ftp.vim.org/vim/runtime/syntax/
[vimrc]: http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/starting.html#vimrc
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