Some clarification in readme, and emphasized that formatprograms should
read and write from and to stdin and stdout.(#8)
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README.md
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README.md
@ -30,9 +30,12 @@ Still you can decide to download this repository as a zip file or whatever and e
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How to use
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----------
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First you should install an external program that can format code of the programming language you are using.
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It suffices to make the formatprogram globally available, which is the case if you install it via your package manager.
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Alternatively you can point vim to the the binary by explicitly putting the absolute path in `g:formatprg_<filetype>` in your .vimrc.
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A third way to make vim detect the formatprogram, is by putting its binary (or a link to it) in the `formatters/` directory within the directory of vim-autoformat.
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This can either be one of the programs that are listed below as defaultprograms, or a custom program.
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For using a custom formatprogram, read the text below *How can I change the behaviour of formatters, or add one myself?*
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If the formatprogram you want to use is installed correctly, in one of the following ways, vim automatically detects it.
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* It suffices to make the formatprogram globally available, which is the case if you install it via your package manager.
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* Alternatively you can point vim to the the binary by explicitly putting the absolute path in `g:formatprg_<filetype>` in your .vimrc.
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* A third way to make vim detect the formatprogram, is by putting its binary (or a link to it) in the `formatters/` directory within the directory of vim-autoformat.
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Remember that when no formatprogram exists for a certain filetype, vim-autoformat uses vim's indent functionality as a fallback.
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This will fix at least the indentation of your code, according to vim's indentfile for that filetype.
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@ -40,7 +43,7 @@ When you have installed the formatters you need, you can format the entire buffe
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For convenience it is recommended that you assign a key for this, like so:
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```vim
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noremap <F7> :Autoformat<CR><CR>
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noremap <F3> :Autoformat<CR><CR>
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```
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If you don't want to format the entire buffer, you can alternatively format visually selected code with `gq`.
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@ -74,12 +77,12 @@ And here the link to its page on the python website: http://pypi.python.org/pypi
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It's probably in your distro's repository, so you can download it as a regular package.
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For Ubuntu type `sudo apt-get install tidy` in a terminal.
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How can I change the behaviour of formatters?
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How can I change the behaviour of formatters, or add one myself?
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---------------------------------------------
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If you are not satisfied with the default formatting behaviour that is provided by vim-autoformat, you can override it by defining it yourself.
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If you need a formatter that is not among the defaults, or if you are not satisfied with the default formatting behaviour that is provided by vim-autoformat, you can define it yourself.
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*The formatprogram must read the unformatted code from the standard input, and write the formatted code to the standard output.*
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The formatprogram that is used for a certain `<filetype>` is defined in `g:formatprg_<filetype>`.
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The arguments that are passed to the formatprogram are either defined in `g:formatprg_args_expr_<filetype>` as an expression which can be evaluated, or else in `g:formatprg_args_<filetype>` as a plain string.
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The formatprogram must read the unformatted code from the standard input, and write the formatted code to the standard output.
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Defining any of these variable manually in your .vimrc, will override the default value, if existing.
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So, a complete definition in your .vimrc for C# files could look like this:
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