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*command-t.txt* Command-T plug-in for Vim *command-t*
CONTENTS *command-t-contents*
1. Introduction |command-t-intro|
2. Requirements |command-t-requirements|
3. Installation |command-t-installation|
3. Managing using Pathogen |command-t-pathogen|
4. Trouble-shooting |command-t-trouble-shooting|
5. Usage |command-t-usage|
6. Commands |command-t-commands|
7. Mappings |command-t-mappings|
8. Options |command-t-options|
9. Authors |command-t-authors|
10. Website |command-t-website|
11. Donations |command-t-donations|
12. License |command-t-license|
13. History |command-t-history|
INTRODUCTION *command-t-intro*
The Command-T plug-in provides an extremely fast, intuitive mechanism for
opening files with a minimal number of keystrokes. It's named "Command-T"
because it is inspired by the "Go to File" window bound to Command-T in
TextMate.
Files are selected by typing characters that appear in their paths, and are
ordered by an algorithm which knows that characters that appear in certain
locations (for example, immediately after a path separator) should be given
more weight.
To search efficiently, especially in large projects, you should adopt a
"path-centric" rather than a "filename-centric" mentality. That is you should
think more about where the desired file is found rather than what it is
called. This means narrowing your search down by including some characters
from the upper path components rather than just entering characters from the
filename itself.
Screencasts demonstrating the plug-in can be viewed at:
https://wincent.com/products/command-t
REQUIREMENTS *command-t-requirements*
The plug-in requires Vim compiled with Ruby support, a compatible Ruby
installation at the operating system level, and a C compiler to build
the Ruby extension.
1. Vim compiled with Ruby support
You can check for Ruby support by launching Vim with the --version switch:
vim --version
If "+ruby" appears in the version information then your version of Vim has
Ruby support.
Another way to check is to simply try using the :ruby command from within Vim
itself:
:ruby 1
If your Vim lacks support you'll see an error message like this:
E319: Sorry, the command is not available in this version
The version of Vim distributed with Mac OS X does not include Ruby support,
while MacVim does; it is available from:
http://github.com/b4winckler/macvim/downloads
For Windows users, the Vim 7.2 executable available from www.vim.org does
include Ruby support, and is recommended over version 7.3 (which links against
Ruby 1.9, but apparently has some bugs that need to be resolved).
2. Ruby
In addition to having Ruby support in Vim, your system itself must have a
compatible Ruby install. "Compatible" means the same version as Vim itself
links against. If you use a different version then Command-T is unlikely
to work (see TROUBLE-SHOOTING below).
On Mac OS X Snow Leopard, the system comes with Ruby 1.8.7 and all recent
versions of MacVim (the 7.2 snapshots and 7.3) are linked against it.
On Linux and similar platforms, the linked version of Ruby will depend on
your distribution. You can usually find this out by examining the
compilation and linking flags displayed by the |:version| command in Vim, and
by looking at the output of:
:ruby puts RUBY_VERSION
A suitable Ruby environment for Windows can be installed using the Ruby
1.8.7-p299 RubyInstaller available at:
http://rubyinstaller.org/downloads/archives
If using RubyInstaller be sure to download the installer executable, not the
7-zip archive. When installing mark the checkbox "Add Ruby executables to your
PATH" so that Vim can find them.
3. C compiler
Part of Command-T is implemented in C as a Ruby extension for speed, allowing
it to work responsively even on directory hierarchies containing enormous
numbers of files. As such, a C compiler is required in order to build the
extension and complete the installation.
On Mac OS X, this can be obtained by installing the Xcode Tools that come on
the Mac OS X install disc.
On Windows, the RubyInstaller Development Kit can be used to conveniently
install the necessary tool chain:
http://rubyinstaller.org/downloads/archives
At the time of writing, the appropriate development kit for use with Ruby
1.8.7 is DevKit-3.4.5r3-20091110.
To use the Development Kit extract the archive contents to your C:\Ruby
folder.
INSTALLATION *command-t-installation*
Command-T is distributed as a "vimball" which means that it can be installed
by opening it in Vim and then sourcing it:
:e command-t.vba
:so %
The files will be installed in your |'runtimepath'|. To check where this is
you can issue:
:echo &rtp
The C extension must then be built, which can be done from the shell. If you
use a typical |'runtimepath'| then the files were installed inside ~/.vim and
you can build the extension with:
cd ~/.vim/ruby/command-t
ruby extconf.rb
make
Note: If you are an RVM user, you must perform the build using the same
version of Ruby that Vim itself is linked against. This will often be the
system Ruby, which can be selected before issuing the "make" command with:
rvm use system
MANAGING USING PATHOGEN *command-t-pathogen*
Pathogen is a plugin that allows you to maintain plugin installations in
separate, isolated subdirectories under the "bundle" directory in your
|'runtimepath'|. The following examples assume that you already have
Pathogen installed and configured, and that you are installing into
~/.vim/bundle. For more information about Pathogen, see:
http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=2332
If you manage your entire ~/.vim folder using Git then you can add the
Command-T repository as a submodule:
cd ~/.vim
git submodule add git://git.wincent.com/command-t.git bundle/command-t
git submodule init
Or if you just wish to do a simple clone instead of using submodules:
cd ~/.vim
git clone git://git.wincent.com/command-t.git bundle/command-t
Once you have a local copy of the repository you can update it at any time
with:
cd ~/.vim/bundle/command-t
git pull
Or you can switch to a specific release with:
cd ~/.vim/bundle/command-t
git checkout 0.8b
After installing or updating you must build the extension:
cd ~/.vim/bundle/command-t
rake make
While the Vimball installation automatically generates the help tags, under
Pathogen it is necessary to do so explicitly from inside Vim:
:call pathogen#helptags()
TROUBLE-SHOOTING *command-t-trouble-shooting*
Most installation problems are caused by a mismatch between the version of
Ruby on the host operating system, and the version of Ruby that Vim itself
linked against at compile time. For example, if one is 32-bit and the other is
64-bit, or one is from the Ruby 1.9 series and the other is from the 1.8
series, then the plug-in is not likely to work.
As such, on Mac OS X, I recommend using the standard Ruby that comes with the
system (currently 1.8.7) along with the latest version of MacVim (currently
version 7.3). If you wish to use custom builds of Ruby or of MacVim (not
recommmended) then you will have to take extra care to ensure that the exact
same Ruby environment is in effect when building Ruby, Vim and the Command-T
extension.
For Windows, the following combination is known to work:
- Vim 7.2 from http://www.vim.org/download.php:
ftp://ftp.vim.org/pub/vim/pc/gvim72.exe
- Ruby 1.8.7-p299 from http://rubyinstaller.org/downloads/archives:
http://rubyforge.org/frs/download.php/71492/rubyinstaller-1.8.7-p299.exe
- DevKit 3.4.5r3-20091110 from http://rubyinstaller.org/downloads/archives:
http://rubyforge.org/frs/download.php/66888/devkit-3.4.5r3-20091110.7z
If a problem occurs the first thing you should do is inspect the output of:
ruby extconf.rb
make
During the installation, and:
vim --version
And compare the compilation and linker flags that were passed to the
extension and to Vim itself when they were built. If the Ruby-related
flags or architecture flags are different then it is likely that something
has changed in your Ruby environment and the extension may not work until
you eliminate the discrepancy.
USAGE *command-t-usage*
Bring up the Command-T match window by typing:
<Leader>t
This mapping is set up automatically for you, provided you do not already have
a mapping for <Leader>t or |:CommandT|. You can also bring up the match window
by issuing the command:
:CommandT
A prompt will appear at the bottom of the screen along with a match window
showing all of the files in the current directory (as returned by the
|:pwd| command).
For the most efficient file navigation within a project it's recommended that
you |:cd| into the root directory of your project when starting to work on it.
If you wish to open a file from outside of the project folder you can pass in
an optional path argument (relative or absolute) to |:CommandT|:
:CommandT ../path/to/other/files
Type letters in the prompt to narrow down the selection, showing only the
files whose paths contain those letters in the specified order. Letters do not
need to appear consecutively in a path in order for it to be classified as a
match.
Once the desired file has been selected it can be opened by pressing <CR>.
(By default files are opened in the current window, but there are other
mappings that you can use to open in a vertical or horizontal split, or in
a new tab.) Note that if you have |'nohidden'| set and there are unsaved
changes in the current window when you press <CR> then opening in the current
window would fail; in this case Command-T will open the file in a new split.
The following mappings are active when the prompt has focus:
<BS> delete the character to the left of the cursor
<Del> delete the character at the cursor
<Left> move the cursor one character to the left
<C-h> move the cursor one character to the left
<Right> move the cursor one character to the right
<C-l> move the cursor one character to the right
<C-a> move the cursor to the start (left)
<C-e> move the cursor to the end (right)
<C-u> clear the contents of the prompt
<Tab> change focus to the match listing
The following mappings are active when the match listing has focus:
<Tab> change focus to the prompt
The following mappings are active when either the prompt or the match listing
has focus:
<CR> open the selected file
<C-CR> open the selected file in a new split window
<C-s> open the selected file in a new split window
<C-v> open the selected file in a new vertical split window
<C-t> open the selected file in a new tab
<C-j> select next file in the match listing
<C-n> select next file in the match listing
<Down> select next file in the match listing
<C-k> select previous file in the match listing
<C-p> select previous file in the match listing
<Up> select previous file in the match listing
<C-c> cancel (dismisses match listing)
The following is also available on terminals which support it:
<Esc> cancel (dismisses match listing)
Note that the default mappings can be overriden by setting options in your
~/.vimrc file (see the OPTIONS section for a full list of available options).
In addition, when the match listing has focus, typing a character will cause
the selection to jump to the first path which begins with that character.
Typing multiple characters consecutively can be used to distinguish between
paths which begin with the same prefix.
COMMANDS *command-t-commands*
*:CommandT*
|:CommandT| Brings up the Command-T match window, starting in the
current working directory as returned by the|:pwd|
command.
*:CommandTFlush*
|:CommandTFlush|Instructs the plug-in to flush its path cache, causing
the directory to be rescanned for new or deleted paths
the next time the match window is shown. In addition, all
configuration settings are re-evaluated, causing any
changes made to settings via the |:let| command to be picked
up.
MAPPINGS *command-t-mappings*
By default Command-T comes with only one mapping:
<Leader>t bring up the Command-T match window
However, Command-T won't overwrite a pre-existing mapping so if you prefer
to define a different mapping use a line like this in your ~/.vimrc:
nmap <silent> <Leader>t :CommandT<CR>
Replacing "<Leader>t" with your mapping of choice.
Note that in the case of MacVim you actually can map to Command-T (written
as <D-t> in Vim) in your ~/.gvimrc file if you first unmap the existing menu
binding of Command-T to "New Tab":
if has("gui_macvim")
macmenu &File.New\ Tab key=<nop>
map <D-t> :CommandT<CR>
endif
When the Command-T window is active a number of other additional mappings
become available for doing things like moving between and selecting matches.
These are fully described above in the USAGE section, and settings for
overriding the mappings are listed below under OPTIONS.
OPTIONS *command-t-options*
A number of options may be set in your ~/.vimrc to influence the behaviour of
the plug-in. To set an option, you include a line like this in your ~/.vimrc:
let g:CommandTMaxFiles=20000
To have Command-T pick up new settings immediately (that is, without having
to restart Vim) you can issue the |:CommandTFlush| command after making
changes via |:let|.
Following is a list of all available options:
*g:CommandTMaxFiles*
|g:CommandTMaxFiles| number (default 10000)
The maximum number of files that will be considered when scanning the
current directory. Upon reaching this number scanning stops.
*g:CommandTMaxDepth*
|g:CommandTMaxDepth| number (default 15)
The maximum depth (levels of recursion) to be explored when scanning the
current directory. Any directories at levels beyond this depth will be
skipped.
*g:CommandTMaxHeight*
|g:CommandTMaxHeight| number (default: 0)
The maximum height in lines the match window is allowed to expand to.
If set to 0, the window will occupy as much of the available space as
needed to show matching entries.
*g:CommandTAlwaysShowDotFiles*
|g:CommandTAlwaysShowDotFiles| boolean (default: 0)
By default Command-T will show dot-files only if the entered search
string contains a dot that could cause a dot-file to match. When set to
a non-zero value, this setting instructs Command-T to always include
matching dot-files in the match list regardless of whether the search
string contains a dot. See also |g:CommandTNeverShowDotFiles|.
*g:CommandTNeverShowDotFiles*
|g:CommandTNeverShowDotFiles| boolean (default: 0)
By default Command-T will show dot-files if the entered search string
contains a dot that could cause a dot-file to match. When set to a
non-zero value, this setting instructs Command-T to never show dot-files
under any circumstances. Note that it is contradictory to set both this
setting and |g:CommandTAlwaysShowDotFiles| to true, and if you do so Vim
will suffer from headaches, nervous twitches, and sudden mood swings.
*g:CommandTScanDotDirectories*
|g:CommandTScanDotDirectories| boolean (default: 0)
Normally Command-T will not recurse into "dot-directories" (directories
whose names begin with a dot) while performing its initial scan. Set
this setting to a non-zero value to override this behavior and recurse.
Note that this setting is completely independent of the
|g:CommandTAlwaysShowDotFiles| and |g:CommandTNeverShowDotFiles|
settings; those apply only to the selection and display of matches
(after scanning has been performed), whereas
|g:CommandTScanDotDirectories| affects the behaviour at scan-time.
Note also that even with this setting on you can still use Command-T to
open files inside a "dot-directory" such as ~/.vim, but you have to use
the |:cd| command to change into that directory first. For example:
:cd ~/.vim
:CommandT
*g:CommandTMatchWindowAtTop*
|g:CommandTMatchWindowAtTop| boolean (default: 0)
When this settings is off (the default) the match window will appear at
the bottom so as to keep it near to the prompt. Turning it on causes the
match window to appear at the top instead. This may be preferable if you
want the best match (usually the first one) to appear in a fixed location
on the screen rather than moving as the number of matches changes during
typing.
As well as the basic options listed above, there are a number of settings that
can be used to override the default key mappings used by Command-T. For
example, to set <C-x> as the mapping for cancelling (dismissing) the Command-T
window, you would add the following to your ~/.vimrc:
let g:CommandTCancelMap='<C-x>'
Multiple, alternative mappings may be specified using list syntax:
let g:CommandTCancelMap=['<C-x>', '<C-c>']
Following is a list of all map settings and their defaults:
Setting Default mapping(s)
*g:CommandTBackspaceMap*
|g:CommandTBackspaceMap| <BS>
*g:CommandTDeleteMap*
|g:CommandTDeleteMap| <Del>
*g:CommandTAcceptSelectionMap*
|g:CommandTAcceptSelectionMap| <CR>
*g:CommandTAcceptSelectionSplitMap*
|g:CommandTAcceptSelectionSplitMap| <C-CR>
<C-s>
*g:CommandTAcceptSelectionTabMap*
|g:CommandTAcceptSelectionTabMap| <C-t>
*g:CommandTAcceptSelectionVSplitMap*
|g:CommandTAcceptSelectionVSplitMap| <C-v>
*g:CommandTToggleFocusMap*
|g:CommandTToggleFocusMap| <Tab>
*g:CommandTCancelMap*
|g:CommandTCancelMap| <C-c>
<Esc> (not on all terminals)
*g:CommandTSelectNextMap*
|g:CommandTSelectNextMap| <C-n>
<C-j>
<Down>
*g:CommandTSelectPrevMap*
|g:CommandTSelectPrevMap| <C-p>
<C-k>
<Up>
*g:CommandTClearMap*
|g:CommandTClearMap| <C-u>
*g:CommandTCursorLeftMap*
|g:CommandTCursorLeftMap| <Left>
<C-h>
*g:CommandTCursorRightMap*
|g:CommandTCursorRightMap| <Right>
<C-l>
*g:CommandTCursorEndMap*
|g:CommandTCursorEndMap| <C-e>
*g:CommandTCursorStartMap*
|g:CommandTCursorStartMap| <C-a>
In addition to the options provided by Command-T itself, some of Vim's own
settings can be used to control behavior:
*command-t-wildignore*
|'wildignore'| string (default: '')
Vim's |'wildignore'| setting is used to determine which files should be
excluded from listings. This is a comma-separated list of glob patterns.
It defaults to the empty string, but common settings include "*.o,*.obj"
(to exclude object files) or ".git,.svn" (to exclude SCM metadata
directories). For example:
:set wildignore+=*.o,*.obj,.git
A pattern such as "vendor/rails/**" would exclude all files and
subdirectories inside the "vendor/rails" directory (relative to
directory Command-T starts in).
See the |'wildignore'| documentation for more information.
AUTHORS *command-t-authors*
Command-T is written and maintained by Wincent Colaiuta <win@wincent.com>.
Other contributors that have submitted patches include (in alphabetical
order):
Lucas de Vries
Matthew Todd
Mike Lundy
Scott Bronson
Sung Pae
Zak Johnson
As this was the first Vim plug-in I had ever written I was heavily influenced
by the design of the LustyExplorer plug-in by Stephen Bach, which I understand
is one of the largest Ruby-based Vim plug-ins to date.
While the Command-T codebase doesn't contain any code directly copied from
LustyExplorer, I did use it as a reference for answers to basic questions (like
"How do you do 'X' in a Ruby-based Vim plug-in?"), and also copied some basic
architectural decisions (like the division of the code into Prompt, Settings
and MatchWindow classes).
LustyExplorer is available from:
http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=1890
WEBSITE *command-t-website*
The official website for Command-T is:
https://wincent.com/products/command-t
The latest release will always be available from there.
Development in progress can be inspected via the project's Git repository
browser at:
https://wincent.com/repos/command-t
A copy of each release is also available from the official Vim scripts site
at:
http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=3025
Bug reports should be submitted to the issue tracker at:
https://wincent.com/issues
DONATIONS *command-t-donations*
Command-T itself is free software released under the terms of the BSD license.
If you would like to support further development you can make a donation via
PayPal to win@wincent.com:
https://wincent.com/products/command-t/donations
LICENSE *command-t-license*
Copyright 2010 Wincent Colaiuta. 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.
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THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
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HISTORY *command-t-history*
1.0 (26 November 2010)
- make relative path simplification work on Windows
1.0b (5 November 2010)
- work around platform-specific Vim 7.3 bug seen by some users (wherein
Vim always falsely reports to Ruby that the buffer numbers is 0)
- re-use the buffer that is used to show the match listing, rather than
throwing it away and recreating it each time Command-T is shown; this
stops the buffer numbers from creeping up needlessly
0.9 (8 October 2010)
- use relative paths when opening files inside the current working directory
in order to keep buffer listings as brief as possible (patch from Matthew
Todd)
0.8.1 (14 September 2010)
- fix mapping issues for users who have set |'notimeout'| (patch from Sung
Pae)
0.8 (19 August 2010)
- overrides for the default mappings can now be lists of strings, allowing
multiple mappings to be defined for any given action
- <Leader>t mapping only set up if no other map for |:CommandT| exists
(patch from Scott Bronson)
- prevent folds from appearing in the match listing
- tweaks to avoid the likelihood of "Not enough room" errors when trying to
open files
- watch out for "nil" windows when restoring window dimensions
- optimizations (avoid some repeated downcasing)
- move all Ruby files under the "command-t" subdirectory and avoid polluting
the "Vim" module namespace
0.8b (11 July 2010)
- large overhaul of the scoring algorithm to make the ordering of returned
results more intuitive; given the scope of the changes and room for
optimization of the new algorithm, this release is labelled as "beta"
0.7 (10 June 2010)
- handle more |'wildignore'| patterns by delegating to Vim's own |expand()|
function; with this change it is now viable to exclude patterns such as
'vendor/rails/**' in addition to filename-only patterns like '*.o' and
'.git' (patch from Mike Lundy)
- always sort results alphabetically for empty search strings; this eliminates
filesystem-specific variations (patch from Mike Lundy)
0.6 (28 April 2010)
- |:CommandT| now accepts an optional parameter to specify the starting
directory, temporarily overriding the usual default of Vim's |:pwd|
- fix truncated paths when operating from root directory
0.5.1 (11 April 2010)
- fix for Ruby 1.9 compatibility regression introduced in 0.5
- documentation enhancements, specifically targetted at Windows users
0.5 (3 April 2010)
- |:CommandTFlush| now re-evaluates settings, allowing changes made via |let|
to be picked up without having to restart Vim
- fix premature abort when scanning very deep directory hierarchies
- remove broken |<Esc>| key mapping on vt100 and xterm terminals
- provide settings for overriding default mappings
- minor performance optimization
0.4 (27 March 2010)
- add |g:CommandTMatchWindowAtTop| setting (patch from Zak Johnson)
- documentation fixes and enhancements
- internal refactoring and simplification
0.3 (24 March 2010)
- add |g:CommandTMaxHeight| setting for controlling the maximum height of the
match window (patch from Lucas de Vries)
- fix bug where |'list'| setting might be inappropriately set after dismissing
Command-T
- compatibility fix for different behaviour of "autoload" under Ruby 1.9.1
- avoid "highlight group not found" warning when run under a version of Vim
that does not have syntax highlighting support
- open in split when opening normally would fail due to |'hidden'| and
|'modified'| values
0.2 (23 March 2010)
- compatibility fixes for compilation under Ruby 1.9 series
- compatibility fixes for compilation under Ruby 1.8.5
- compatibility fixes for Windows and other non-UNIX platforms
- suppress "mapping already exists" message if <Leader>t mapping is already
defined when plug-in is loaded
- exclude paths based on |'wildignore'| setting rather than a hardcoded
regular expression
0.1 (22 March 2010)
- initial public release
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