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CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
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README.markdown |
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1. Introduction
2. Installation
3. FAQ
4. Other resources
1. Introduction
Syntastic is a syntax checking plugin for Vim that runs files through external syntax checkers and displays any resulting errors to the user. This can be done on demand, or automatically as files are saved. 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.
At the time of this writing, syntax checking plugins exist for ActionScript, Ada, AppleScript, AsciiDoc, ASM, BEMHTML, Bourne shell, C, C++, C#, Chef, CoffeeScript, Coco, Coq, CSS, Cucumber, CUDA, D, Dart, DocBook, Dust, Elixir, Erlang, eRuby, Fortran, Gentoo metadata, GLSL, Go, Haml, Haskell, Haxe, Handlebars, HSS, HTML, Java, JavaScript, JSON, JSX, LESS, Lex, Limbo, LISP, LLVM intermediate language, Lua, MATLAB, NASM, Objective-C, Objective-C++, OCaml, Perl, Perl POD, PHP, gettext Portable Object, Puppet, Python, Racket, reStructuredText, Ruby, Rust, SASS/SCSS, Scala, Slim, Tcl, TeX, Texinfo, Twig, TypeScript, Vala, Verilog, VHDL, VimL, xHtml, XML, XSLT, YACC, YAML, z80, Zope page templates, and zsh.
Below is a screenshot showing the methods that Syntastic uses to display syntax errors. Note that, in practise, you will only have a subset of these methods enabled.
- Errors are loaded into the location list for the corresponding window.
- When the cursor is on a line containing an error, the error message is echoed in the command window.
- Signs are placed beside lines with errors - note that warnings are displayed in a different color.
- There is a configurable statusline flag you can include in your statusline config.
- Hover the mouse over a line containing an error and the error message is displayed as a balloon.
- (not shown) Highlighting errors with syntax highlighting. Erroneous parts of lines can be highlighted.
2. Installation
Installing syntastic is easy but first you need to have the pathogen plugin installed. If you already have pathogen working then skip Step 1 and go to Step 2.
2.1. Step 1: Install pathogen.vim
First I'll show you how to install Tim Pope's pathogen so that it's easy to
install syntastic. Do this in your terminal so that you get the pathogen.vim
file and the directories it needs:
mkdir -p ~/.vim/autoload ~/.vim/bundle; \
curl -so ~/.vim/autoload/pathogen.vim \
https://raw.github.com/tpope/vim-pathogen/master/autoload/pathogen.vim
Next you need to add this to your ~/.vimrc
:
execute pathogen#infect()
2.2. Step 2: Install syntastic as a pathogen bundle
You now have pathogen installed and can put syntastic into ~/.vim/bundle
like
this:
cd ~/.vim/bundle
git clone https://github.com/scrooloose/syntastic.git
Quit vim and start it back up to reload it, then type:
:Helptags
If you get an error when you do this, then you probably didn't install pathogen right. Go back to Step 1 and make sure you did the following:
- Created both the
~/.vim/autoload
and~/.vim/bundle
directories. - Added the
call pathogen#infect()
line to your~/.vimrc
file - Did the
git clone
of syntastic inside~/.vim/bundle
- Have permissions to access all of these directories.
3. FAQ
Q. I installed syntastic but it isn't reporting any errors...
A. The most likely reason is that none of the syntax checkers that it requires
is installed. For example: by default, python requires either flake8
or
pylint
to be installed and in your $PATH
. To see which executables are
supported, look at the wiki. Note that aliases do not work; the actual
executables must be available in your $PATH
. Symbolic links are okay though.
You can see syntastic's idea of available checkers by running :SyntasticInfo
.
Another reason it could fail is that either the command line options or the error output for a syntax checker may have changed. In this case, make sure you have the latest version of the syntax checker installed. If it still fails then create an issue - or better yet, create a pull request.
Q. The perl
checker has stopped working...
A. The perl
checker runs perl -c
against your file, which in turn
executes any BEGIN
, UNITCHECK
, and CHECK
blocks, and any use
statements in your file (cf. perlrun). This is probably fine if you
wrote the file yourself, but it's a security problem if you're checking third
party files. Since there is currently no way to disable this behaviour while
still producing useful results, the checker is now disabled by default. To
(re-)enable it, set g:syntastic_enable_perl_checker
to 1 in your vimrc:
let g:syntastic_enable_perl_checker = 1
Q. I run a checker and the location list is not updated...
A. By default the location list is changed only when you run the :Errors
command, in order to minimise conflicts with other plugins. If you want the
location list to always be updated when you run the checkers, add this line to
your vimrc:
let g:syntastic_always_populate_loc_list = 1
Q. How can I pass additional arguments to a checker?
A. Almost all syntax checkers use the makeprgBuild()
function. Those checkers
that do can be configured using global variables. The general form of the
global args
variables is syntastic_<filetype>_<checker>_args
.
So, If you wanted to pass "--my --args --here" to the ruby mri checker you would add this line to your vimrc:
let g:syntastic_ruby_mri_args = "--my --args --here"
See :help syntastic-checker-options
for more information.
Q. Syntastic supports several checkers for my filetype - how do I tell it which one(s) to use?
A. Stick a line like this in your vimrc:
let g:syntastic_<filetype>_checkers = ['<checker-name>']
To see the list of supported checkers for your filetype look at the wiki.
e.g. Python has the following checkers, among others: flake8
, pyflakes
,
pylint
and a native python
checker.
To tell syntastic to use pylint
, you would use this setting:
let g:syntastic_python_checkers = ['pylint']
Some filetypes, like PHP, have style checkers as well as syntax checkers. These can be chained together like this:
let g:syntastic_php_checkers = ['php', 'phpcs', 'phpmd']
This is telling syntastic to run the php
checker first, and if no errors are
found, run phpcs
, and then phpmd
.
Q. How can I jump between the different errors without using the location list at the bottom of the window?
A. Vim provides several built in commands for this. See :help :lnext
and
:help :lprev
.
If you use these commands a lot then you may want to add shortcut mappings to your vimrc, or install something like unimpaired, which provides such mappings (among other things).
Q. A syntax checker is giving me unwanted/strange style tips?
A. Some filetypes (e.g. php) have style checkers as well as syntax checkers. You can usually configure the options that are passed to the style checkers, or just disable them. Take a look at the wiki to see what options are available.
Alternatively, you can use g:syntastic_quiet_messages
to filter out the
messages you don't want to see. e.g. To turn off all style messages:
let g:syntastic_quiet_messages = { "type": "style" }
See :help syntastic_quiet_messages
for details.
Q. The error window is closed automatically when I :quit the current buffer but not when I :bdelete it?
A. There is no safe way to handle that situation automatically, but you can work around it:
nnoremap <silent> <C-d> :lclose<CR>:bdelete<CR>
cabbrev <silent> bd lclose\|bdelete
4. Other resources
The preferred place for posting suggestions, reporting bugs, and general discussions related to syntastic is the issue tracker at GitHub. There are also a google group, and a syntastic tag at StackOverflow.
Syntastic aims to provide a common interface to syntax checkers for as many languages as possible. For particular languages, there are, of course, other plugins that provide more functionality than syntastic. You might want to take a look at jedi-vim, python-mode, or YouCompleteMe.