Home

Awesome

SCVim (> 3.5)

A vim plugin for supercollider (tested on Linux and Mac OSX).

This is based of the original scvim by Alex Norman.

Features

Requirements

Installation

scvim plugin installation

It is highly recommended to use either Vim 8+'s native packages or a plugin manager to install scvim.

The most common package manager addons are:

To find help about vim's native packages, in vim, type :help packages

The plugin folder is expected to be found in ~/.vim/pack/*/*/scvim or somewhere below ~/.vim, at a maximum depth of two folders and with the word scvim in it (which should in theory cover all use-cases for the above plugin managers).

Using Vim's native package management

To automatically enable scvim when you use vim. Assuming that your vim pack package directory is called my

Execute:

mkdir -p ~/.vim/pack/my/start/
git clone https://github.com/supercollider/scvim.git ~/.vim/pack/my/start/scvim

If you would like to only enable scvim when you first start editing a SuperCollider file. Assuming that your vim pack package directory is called my

Execute:

mkdir -p ~/.vim/pack/my/opt/
git clone https://github.com/supercollider/scvim.git ~/.vim/pack/my/opt/scvim

Then, add the following to your ~/.vimrc

au BufEnter,BufWinEnter,BufNewFile,BufRead *.sc,*.scd set filetype=supercollider
au Filetype supercollider packadd scvim

SCVim.sc

If your SuperCollider version was not build with vim support (i.e. the class SCVim does not exist yet), you'll need to either symlink sc/SCVim.sc somewhere where SuperCollider can find it (typically that would be in Platform.userExtensionDir from within SuperCollider), or add (the absolute path to) scvim/sc to includePaths: in your sclang_conf.yaml.

Configuration

ENV variables:

Path to the tags file export SCVIM_TAGFILE=/your/path this defaults to ~/.sctags

Configurable VIM variables:

The following variables are available for configuration in your .vimrc file:

VariableDescriptionDefault
g:sclangTermCommand to open a terminal window"open -a Terminal.app" on macOS,<br />"x-terminal-emulator -e $SHELL -ic" on Linux
g:sclangPipeAppAbsolute path to start_pipe script"~/.vim/bundle/scvim/bin/start_pipe"
g:sclangDispatcherAbsolute path to sc_dispatcher script"~/.vim/bundle/scvim/bin/sc_dispatcher"
g:scFlashHighlighting of evaluated code0
g:scSplitDirectionDefault window orientation when using a terminal multiplexer"h"
g:scSplitSizePost window size (% of screen) when using a terminal multiplexer50
g:scTerminalBufferIf set to "on" use vim's :term to launch g:sclangTerm"off"

Example .vimrc line for gnome-terminal users:

let g:sclangTerm = "gnome-terminal -x $SHELL -ic"

To enable highlighting of evaluated code:

let g:scFlash = 1

Usage

To start open a file with the right extension :e foo.sc(d) Enter :SClangStart and a terminal should open with a running sclang session.

See the commands reference for general usage.

ctags support:

run :SCtags from vim or SCVim.generateTagsFile() from sclang

This gives you a couple of things:

Commands:

Key commands:

in normal mode:

in normal/insert mode:

Terminal Multiplexer Options

Supported Terminal Multiplexers are tmux and screen. To use with scvim, open the multiplexer before opening vim. For example:

$> tmux new -s sc $> vim mySCfile.scd

Default settings for window orienation and window size can be set in your .vimrc.

Window orientation options are "h" for horizontal and "v" for vertical (double quotes are required).

The window size option for tmux is the percentage of the screen you want the post window to take up. For example, to have your main window taking up 70% of the left of the screen and your post window the remaining 30% at the right:

let g:scSplitDirection = "h"
let g:scSplitSize = 30`

Changing Multiplexor Options on SClangStart:

Options for the multiplexer of your choice can be set on the fly when you use the SClangStart command:

:call SClangStart("h", 30)