Awesome
<div align="center"> <img alt="Vim-CtrlSpace" src="https://raw.github.com/yehuohan/vim-ctrlspace/master/gfx/logo5.png" /> <br><br> </div>This is a fork of vim-ctrlspace. The main changes are listed following:
- (20170903) Change bookmark list as files bookmark list. All your bookmarked files will be listed with filename and filepath. For example, there 3 bookmarked files in the list in the picutre following.
Key | Action |
---|---|
Tab, CR, Space | Edit bookmarked file (Tab - goto buffer, CR - close, Space - stay) |
a | Add bookmark |
d | Delete bookmark |
t | Append bookmarked file in new tab |
s | Append bookmarked file in split window |
v | Append bookmarked file in vsplit window |
g | Toggle sort mode between path and name |
- (20170905) Change workspace list as all workspace list. Now workspace list will show all workspaces of projects with workspace name and projects path. For example, there 2 projects and 4 workspaces in the picture following.
Key | Action |
---|---|
Tab, CR, Space | Load workspace (Tab - goto buffer, CR - close, Space - stay) |
t | Append workspace in new tab |
a | Add new workspace |
s | Save workspace |
d | Delete workspace |
m, = | Rename workspace |
g | Toggle sort mode between path and name |
C | Clear all buffers and tabs of workspace |
<br><br>
Welcome to Vim-CtrlSpace, a comprehensive solution for your Vim editor providing:
- tabs / buffers / files management
- fast fuzzy searching powered by Go
- workspaces (sessions)
- bookmarks for your favorite projects
The plugin name follows the convention of naming fuzzy search plugins
after their default mappings (like Command-T or CtrlP), hence the
plugin mapping is by default Ctrl
+ Space
.
If you like the plugin please don't forget to leave a :star: for this project! This will help me to estimate the plugin popularity and plan further development :).
If you have already starred this repo, thank you! Thanks to you it's my pet project now :). If you have a question, a feature request, or a new idea, don't hesitate to post new issues or pull requests. Collaboration is the most awesome thing in the open source community!
Version 5
Vim-CtrlSpace started over 2 years ago as a fork of another plugin and the Version 5 is the result of the experience gained during that period and cooperation with the community.
Version 5 is the biggest upgrade in the plugin history. All plugin code has been rewritten from scratch taking user feedback as a great resource of ideas and challenges into account. Thanks to users the plugin has configurable key mappings and allows you to handle projects with 100 000 files!
In case you're curious, Vim-CtrlSpace 5 took me 5 months of spare evenings to complete :).
The most exciting Vim-CtrlSpace 5 features are:
- better, modular, and extensible code base
- simplified, well thought-out, and clear design
- new fuzzy search engine for files (written in Go)
- more effective and responsive behavior
- fine-grained configuration
Version 5 is not backward compatible. All configuration variables and API functions have been renamed. Please check Vim help for more info:
:help ctrlspace-configuration
Idea by Analogy
Vim-CtrlSpace interface is a window you can invoke by pressing
<C-Space>
. The window displays a list of items. You can select those
items with <h>
, <j>
, and <CR>
keys.
Generally speaking Vim-CtrlSpace can display 5 types of lists:
- Buffer List
- File List
- Tab List
- Workspace List
- Bookmark List
Lists can be explained with a simple analogy. Let's imagine Vim is a writing desk. Your projects are like drawers. The Bookmark List simply displays your favorite projects.
To get documents from a drawer you would need a File List. It allows you to easily look up contents of a given project. Once you locate and pick up a file it becomes a buffer.
A buffer is like a sheet of paper lying on the desk. Sometimes you can have a blank piece of paper – that's a new unsaved buffer. It would become eventually a file on the disk once saved (put into a drawer). To manage all buffers on the desk you would need a Buffer List.
So far our analogy is fairly simple. This workflow is straightforward but inefficient in the long run with a large amount of files. How could we optimize it?
The answer are tabs – a secret weapon of Vim-CtrlSpace. Each tab holds a separate list of buffers. And this is something very different when compared to plain Vim. Tabs powered by the plugin can be seen as piles of documents on the desk.
With tabs you can, for example:
- group related buffers
- extract to other tabs
- name them accordingly
- move or copy them
Tabs usage in Vim-CtrlSpace is quite more extensive than in Vim. This is because they serve mainly as independent buffer lists, so you are likely to have plenty of them. Tabs can be accessed and managed within Tab List.
All your buffers, tabs, and tab layouts can be persisted as a workspace. It's like taking a picture of your desk with an instant camera. You can save multiple workspaces per project with Workspace List.
Getting Started
Installation
If you use Vundle add to your .vimrc
:
Plugin 'vim-ctrlspace/vim-ctrlspace'
You can also clone the repository to your .vim
directory:
cd ~/.vim
git clone https://github.com/vim-ctrlspace/vim-ctrlspace.git .
Basic Settings
First please make sure that you set nocompatible
and hidden
options
(required by the plugin) in your .vimrc
:
set nocompatible
set hidden
If you feel brave enough turn off tabline:
set showtabline=0
Tabline in Vim has very limited capabilities and as Vim-CtrlSpace makes
use of tabs intensively, tabline would just get in your way. Tab List
(<l>
) makes tabline obsolete ;).
Go Engine
The plugin provides engine compiled for popular operating systems and
architectures. By default it will attempt to detect your os and
architecture. To see if auto detection was successful press <?>
.
To find more about file engines check:
:help g:CtrlSpaceFileEngine
Symbols
Vim-Ctrlspace displays icons in the UI if your font supports UTF8, or ASCII characters as a fallback. Some symbols (glyphs) might not look well with the font you are using, so feel free to change and adjust them.
This is the config I use for Inconsolata font in MacVim:
if has("gui_running")
" Settings for MacVim and Inconsolata font
let g:CtrlSpaceSymbols = { "File": "◯", "CTab": "▣", "Tabs": "▢" }
endif
Since it's impossible to provide universal character set that would look well on any machine, therefore the fine tuning is left up to you.
You can find more about this tuning option in the plugin help:
:help g:CtrlSpaceSymbols
If you feel that you have found a better symbol for a given view, you are more than welcome to open a pull request.
Glob Command
Another important setting is the Glob command. This command is used to
collect all files in your project directory. Specifically, I recommend
that you install and use ag
, as it respects .gitignore
rules and is
really fast. Once it's installed you can add this line to your .vimrc
:
if executable("ag")
let g:CtrlSpaceGlobCommand = 'ag -l --nocolor -g ""'
endif
Search Timing
If you usually have to deal with huge projects having 100 000 files you
can increase plugin fuzzy search delay to make it even more responsible by
providing a higher g:CtrlSpaceSearchTiming
value:
let g:CtrlSpaceSearchTiming = 500
Colors
Finally, you can adjust some plugin colors. By default plugin uses the following setup:
hi link CtrlSpaceNormal PMenu
hi link CtrlSpaceSelected PMenuSel
hi link CtrlSpaceSearch Search
hi link CtrlSpaceStatus StatusLine
However some color schemes show search results with the same colors as PMenu groups. If that's your case try to link CtrlSpaceSearch highlight group to IncSearch instead:
hi link CtrlSpaceSearch IncSearch
Of course nothing prevents you from providing your own highlighting, for example:
hi CtrlSpaceSearch guifg=#cb4b16 guibg=NONE gui=bold ctermfg=9 ctermbg=NONE term=bold cterm=bold
First Steps
Alright! You've hopefully installed, configured Vim-CtrlSpace, and restarted Vim (otherwise do it!). Now you're wondering how to start using this thing.
First, you need to select a project. Vim operates in a directory,
described as CWD
(Current Working Directory). If you've just started
a MacVim it's probably pointing to your home directory (issue :pwd
to
check it).
I advise you to add a project to the Bookmark List by opening the plugin
window (<C-Space>
) and pressing <b>
. The plugin will ask for a project
directory.
Make sure that the path is not your home directory. Otherwise the
plugin will start indexing all your files which will be pointless and
resource exhaustive. Be concrete and provide a real path to a project.
Once your bookmark is created, you can go there with <CR>
.
Now open some files with <o>
. Finally save a workspace with <w>
by
providing your first workspace name.
For more information please check out Vim-CtrlSpace help directly in Vim:
:help ctrlspace
For key reference press <?>
inside the plugin window.
Fuzzy Search Hints
If you are used to hitting the <ctrl-P>
key combination for fuzzy search, add
this to your .vimrc file:
nnoremap <silent><C-p> :CtrlSpace O<CR>
Be sure to remember to refresh your search file list using <r>
command.
Automatically Saving Workspace
Ctrl-Space can automatically save your workspace status based on configurations below:
let g:CtrlSpaceLoadLastWorkspaceOnStart = 1
let g:CtrlSpaceSaveWorkspaceOnSwitch = 1
let g:CtrlSpaceSaveWorkspaceOnExit = 1
Authors and License
Copyright © 2013-2015 Szymon Wrozynski and Contributors. Licensed under MIT License conditions.
Vim-CtrlSpace is inspired by Robert Lillack plugin VIM bufferlist © 2005 Robert Lillack. Moreover some concepts and inspiration has been taken from Vim-Tabber by Jim Steward and Tabline by Matthew Kitt.
Special thanks to Wojtek Ryrych for help and patience ;) and all Contributors.