Hi Tony!
On So, 08 Jul 2012, Tony Mechelynck wrote:
> On 08/07/12 08:48, Christian Brabandt wrote:
> >Hi chris!
> >
> >On So, 08 Jul 2012, chris wrote:
> >
> >>
> >>I set one option omnifunc in `~/.vim/ftplugin/python/python.vim` like this:
> >> setlocal omnifunc=3Dpython3complete#Complete
> >>But this can not work.
> >>When I open a python file. I checked omnifunc setting with command:
> >> `:verbose set omnifunc?`
> >>I get output:
> >> omnifunc=3Dpythoncomplete
> >> Last set /usr/share/vim/vim73/ftplugin/python.vim
> >>
> >>I want to override the system omnifunc setting with my own setting:
> >> setlocal omnifunc=3Dpython3complete#Complete
> >
> >http://vimhelp.appspot.com/vim_faq.txt.html#faq-26.3
> >
> >regards,
> >Christian
> >
>
> There is an error in that FAQ:
>
> - There is no $VIMRTUNTIME directory (with T after the R), it is
> $VIMRUNTIME, and in addition you should *never* modify its contents
> or that of any of its subdirectories at any depth, because any
> update of Vim (next week, or three years from now) may override your
> changes with no warning.
That is no problem, as the VIMRUNTIME directory contains no after/
directory, so placing files there should be safe.
> You should use one of the following:
>
> - for small changes to be done after (and in addition to) what is
> already done by the plugin installed with Vim, use an
> after-directory, as follows (replacing foobar by the 'filetype' of
> the concerned files):
>
> - for changes private to one user (one login name):
> - on Windows:
> $HOME/vimfiles/after/ftplugin/foobar.vim
> - on Unix-like OSes:
> $HOME/.vim/after/ftplugin/foobar.vim
> - for changes affecting all users on the system (on any OS):
> $VIM/vimfiles/after/ftplugin/foobar.vim
>
> - when replacing the whole filetype-plugin by a different version,
> or when installing a new ftplugin for some filetype not yet
> supported by Vim out of the box: use the same paths without the
> after/ in them. In that case you should place near the start of your
> plugin an "if... finish... endif... let" block like the one in the
> plugins distributed with Vim.
>
> All the above paths are given in Vim terminology (which is similar
> to Unix terminology, but is understood even by Vim for Windows);
> they don't exist by default, so the first time you need them you
> will have to create them using mkdir (on any OS including
> DOS/Windows) or md (on DOS/Windows only). $VIM and, on DOS/Windows,
> $HOME, do not necessarily exist outside Vim. If $HOME has no value
> (or no valid value) inside Vim, you can use $VIM instead; but on any
> but possibly very old versions of Windows, $HOMEDRIVE and $HOMEPATH
> are defined by the system, and if $HOME is undefined at Vim startup,
> Vim will set it by expanding $HOMEDRIVE$HOMEPATH before sourcing
> your vimrc. To know which values Vim uses, you can type (in a
> running Vim):
>
> :echo $VIM
> :echo $HOME
Thanks, I updated the faq.
regards,
Christian
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Saturday, July 14, 2012
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