This is a distribution of plug-ins and mappings for Vim, Gvim and MacVim.
It is designed to provide minimal working environment using the most popular plug-ins and the most common mappings.
The distribution is completely customisable using a ~/.vimrc.before
and ~/.vimrc.after
Vim RC files.
Please run rake
twice before running macvim; make sure command-t
is
gone.
If you were using Janus before January 2012, note that Janus has gone
through a rewrite to make it more stable and customizable. Most notably,
you can now disable plugins using janus#disable_plugin
and customize
Janus using ~/.vimrc.before
and ~/.vimrc.after
. See the rest of this
README
and the Customization wiki page.
To upgrade to the latest version:
- remove
~/.vim
,~/.vimrc
and~/.gvimrc
. - move customizations from
~/.vimrc.local
to~/.vimrc.before
and~/.vimrc.after
. - Do the same with
/.gvimrc.local
. - Run the installer:
curl -Lo- https://bit.ly/janus-bootstrap | bash
To update to the latest version of the distribution, just run rake
inside your ~/.vim
directory.
NOTE: If you ever have an error updating Janus relating to a
missing commit in a submodule, please try running rake
again before
submitting an issue.
The mailing list is hosted at Google Groups, please join it for discussion and announcements.
The distribution is designed to work with Vim >= 7.3.
The distribution also requires ack
, ctags
, git
, ruby
and rake
.
For the most comfortable experience, use the GUI version of Vim. Linux
users should install gvim
, OSX users should install
MacVim. The recommended way of
installing MacVim is using
Homebrew, but before installing
MacVim you need to use system-wide Python (If you are using python that
is):
- If you're using pythonbrew: do
pythonbrew off
$ brew install macvim
If you don't use Homebrew, you can still download MacVim here.
Take a look at the Pre-requisites wiki page for more information.
To install Janus, please use our automatic installer , which backs up any Vim files found in your home folder and installs Janus.
$ curl -Lo- https://bit.ly/janus-bootstrap | bash
You can use ~/.gvimrc.before
and ~/.vimrc.before
for settings Janus itself uses,
such as the leader setting. You may also use ~/.gvimrc.after
and
~/.vimrc.after
for any additional settings; it is also a good place for
overriding Janus settings, as both files will be loaded at the end of
Janus.
For example, to override the default color schemes:
$ echo 'color desert' >> ~/.vimrc.after
$ echo 'color molokai' >> ~/.gvimrc.after
If you want to do additional customization or add more Vim plugins,
create a ~/.janus
directory and add your plugins there, either with a
git clone
or by adding submodules to your own git repository there.
This directory is treated like a normal pathogen directory. For example:
$ cd ~/.janus
$ git clone https://github.com/vim-scripts/Rename2.git rename2
Or, if you have a git repository in ~/.janus
, you can use a submodule:
$ cd ~/.janus
$ git submodule add https://github.com/vim-scripts/Rename2.git rename2
If you would like to disable an included plug-in, you can do that with
the janus#disable_plugin()
function from inside your
~/.vimrc.before
. This function takes a plug-in name as an argument
without the group. For example, if you would like to disable the
NERDCommenter plug-in, you can do that with the command:
$ echo "call janus#disable_plugin('nerdcommenter')" >> ~/.vimrc.before
WARNING: We've noticed over and over, that people fork Janus just to customize it. This is bad practice for several reasons and you should not do that, and here's why:
- Janus is fully customisable and there's no need to change the core for using a different plugin fork or using a different mapping.
- Forking means maintenance; maintenance means burden. Do not burden
yourself with maintaining a fork; that's what the
~/.janus
folder is for.
If you find yourself needing a customisation that is not possible with the current setup, then please open an issue or consider submitting a pull request to make it possible to continue using/improving the official repo.
WARNING: Any uncommited files inside the janus folder will be
removed the next time you run rake
so make sure to either put them in
the custom folder (~/.janus
), or commit them. We clean the janus
folder in case we replace a manually installed plugin (using rake tasks)
with a submodule.
For more information on how to customize Janus, you might want to take a look at the Customization wiki page.
Here're some tips in case you've never used VIM before:
- Type
vimtutor
into a shell to go through a brief interactive tutorial inside VIM. - Read the slides at VIM: Walking Without Crutches.
- Watch the screencasts at vimcasts.org
- Watch Derek Wyatt's energetic tutorial videos at his site
- Read wycats' perspective on learning Vim at Everyone who tried to convince me to use vim was wrong
- Read this and other answers to a question about vim at StackOverflow: Your problem with Vim is that you don't grok vi
- VIM has three modes:
- insert mode- stuff you type is added to the buffer
- normal mode- keys you hit are interpreted as commands
- visual mode- allows you to select blocks of text
- To enter insert mode, hit
i
- To exit insert mode, hit
<ESC>
- To enter visual mode, hit
v
- To exit visual mode, hit
<ESC>
- Use
:q
to exit vim - Certain commands are prefixed with a
<Leader>
key, which maps to\
by default. You can, for example, uselet mapleader = ","
to change this to a comma. If you want this to be in effect for uses of<Leader>
in the .vimrc file, make sure to define this in~/.vimrc.before
- Keyboard cheat sheet.
This Vim distribution includes a number of packages built by others.
Janus ships with a number of basic customizations for vim:
- Line numbers
- Ruler (line and column numbers)
- No wrap (turn off per-buffer via :set wrap)
- Soft 2-space tabs, and default hard tabs to 2 spaces
- Show trailing whitespace as
.
- Make searching highlighted, incremental, and case insensitive unless a capital letter is used
- Always show a status line
- Allow backspacing over everything (indentations, eol, and start characters) in insert mode
<C-P>
inserts the directory of the current file into a command- Automatically resize splits when resizing the Vim window (GUI only)
<leader>ew
expands to:e (directory of current file)/
(open in the current buffer)<leader>es
expands to:sp (directory of current file)/
(open in a horizontal split)<leader>ev
expands to:vsp (directory of current file)/
(open in a vertical split)<leader>et
expands to:tabe (directory of current file)/
(open in a new tab):w!!
expands to%!sudo tee > /dev/null %
. Write to the current file using sudo (if you forgot to run it with sudo), it will prompt for sudo password when writing<F4>
toggles paste mode<leader>fef
formats the entire file<leader>u
converts the entire word to uppercace<leader>l
converts the entire word to lowercase<leader>U
converts the first char of a word to uppercase<leader>L
converts the first char of a word to lowercase<leader>cd
changes the path to the active buffer's file<leader>md
creates the directory of the active buffer's file (For example, when editing a new file for which the path does not exist.)gw
swaps the current word with the following word<leader>ul
underlines the current line with=
<leader>tw
toggles wrap<leader>fc
finds the next conflict marker (tested with Git conflicted files)- Remap
<Down>
and<Up>
togj
andgk
(Wrapped text is not considered a single long line of text.) <leader>hs
toggles highlight search<leader>=
adjusts viewports to the same size (<C-w>=
)<A-[
(<D-[
on MacVim) shifts current line or selected lines rightwards<A-]
(<D-]
on MacVim) shifts current line or selected lines leftwards<C-W>!
invokes kwbd plugin; it closes all open buffers in the open windows but keeps the windows open
Ack.vim uses ack to search inside the current directory for a pattern. You can learn more about it with :help Ack.
Customizations: Janus rebinds command-shift-f (<D-F>
) to bring up
:Ack
.
Fuzzy file, buffer, mru and tag finder. Replaces Command-T
Customizations: For users of Command-T Janus maps CtrlP to command-t (<D-t>
)
NERDCommenter allows you to wrangle your code comments, regardless of
filetype. View :help NERDCommenter
for all the details.
Customizations: Janus binds command-/ (<D-/>
) to toggle comments.
NERDTree is a file explorer plugin that provides "project drawer" functionality to your vim projects. You can learn more about it with :help NERDTree.
Customizations: Janus adds a number of customizations to the core NERDTree:
- Use
<Leader>n
to toggle NERDTree - Ignore compiled ruby, python, and java files
- When opening vim with vim /path, open the left NERDTree to that directory, set the vim pwd, and clear the right buffer
- In general, assume that there is a single NERDTree buffer on the left and one or more editing buffers on the right
In insert mode, start typing something and hit <TAB>
to tab-complete
based on the current context.
Syntastic is a syntax checking plugin that runs buffers through external syntax checkers as they are saved and opened. If syntax errors are detected, the user is notified and is happy because they didn't have to compile their code or execute their script to find them.
Tagbar is a vim plugin for browsing the tags of source code files.
Customizations: Janus binds <Leader>rt
to toggle Tagbar.
EasyMotion provides a much simpler way to use some motions in vim. It
takes the <number>
out of <number>w
or <number>f{char}
by highlighting
all possible choices and allowing you to press one key to jump directly
to the target.
When one of the available motions is triggered, all visible text preceding or following the cursor is faded, and motion targets are highlighted.
EasyMotion is triggered by one of the provided mappings.
check EasyMotion's home page for more information.
Narrowing means focussing on a region and making the rest inaccessible. You simply select the region, call :NarrowRegion and the selected part will open in a new scratch buffer. The rest of the file will be protected, so you won't accidentally modify that buffer. In the new buffer, you can do a global replace, search or anything else to modify that part. When you are finished, simply write that buffer (e.g. by |:w|) and your modifications will be put in the original buffer making it accessible again.
Git Support (Fugitive)
Fugitive adds pervasive git support to git directories in vim. For more
information, use :help fugitive
Use :Gstatus
to view git status
and type -
on any file to stage or
unstage it. Type p
on a file to enter git add -p
and stage specific
hunks in the file.
Use :Gdiff
on an open file to see what changes have been made to that
file
customizations:
<leader>gb
maps to:Gblame<CR>
<leader>gs
maps to:Gstatus<CR>
<leader>gd
maps to:Gdiff<CR>
<leader>gl
maps to:Glog<CR>
<leader>gc
maps to:Gcommit<CR>
<leader>gp
maps to:Git push<CR>
When working with split windows, ZoomWin lets you zoom into a window and
out again using Ctrl-W o
Customizations: Janus binds <leader>zw
to :ZoomWin
Buffergator is a plugin for listing, navigating between, and selecting
buffers to edit. Upon invocation (using the command, :BuffergatorOpen
or BuffergatorToggle
, or the provided key mapping, <Leader>b
), a
catalog
of listed buffers are displayed in a separate new window split
(vertical or horizontal, based on user options; default = vertical).
From this "buffer catalog", a buffer can be selected and opened in an
existing window, a new window split (vertical or horizontal), or a new
tab page.
Selected buffers can be "previewed", i.e. opened in a window or tab
page, but with focus remaining in the buffer catalog. Even better, you
can "walk" up and down the list of buffers shown in the catalog by using
<C-N>
(or <SPACE>
) / <C-P>
(or <C-SPACE>
). These keys select the
next/previous buffer in succession, respectively, opening it for preview
without leaving the buffer catalog viewer.
VRoom is a plugin inspired by Gary Bernhardt's vim config for running your ruby tests/specs/features.
Imagine you're hacking on a Rails controller, when you switch to the
test or specs for the controller, you can use <leader>r
to run all the
specs or <leader>R
to run the closest spec, then you can jump back to
the controller hack on it and use <leader>r
to run the last spec you
ran last time, so you don't need to open the test again.
Then benefits of this plugin are to centralize your workflow in one
window, one software to do it all, which is a huge speedup over using
tmux
or multiple terminal tabs.
Janus ships with a few additional syntaxes:
- Markdown (bound to *.markdown, *.md, and *.mk)
- Mustache (bound to *.mustache)
- Haml (bound to *.haml)
- Sass (bound to *.sass)
- SCSS (bound to *.scss)
- An improved JavaScript syntax (bound to *.js)
- Javascript for any file having
nodejs
in the shebang. - Map Gemfile, Rakefile, Vagrantfile, Procfile, Thorfile, config.ru and *.rake to Ruby.
- Git commits (set your
EDITOR
tovim -f
ormvim -f
on OSX)$ echo "export EDITOR='vim -f'" >> ~/.bashrc
, you can also use Git global config to set this if you have EDITOR set to something else$ git config --global core.editor 'vim -f'
If you're looking for the old janus distribution controlled by a Rakefile then please head over to the rakefile branch but please note that the rakefile branch will not be maintained.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.