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642 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
642 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
*tagbar.txt* Display tags of a file in their correct scope
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Author: Jan Larres <jan@majutsushi.net>
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Licence: Vim licence, see |license|
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Homepage: http://majutsushi.github.com/tagbar/
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Version: 1.2
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==============================================================================
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Contents *tagbar* *tagbar-contents*
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1. Intro ........................... |tagbar-intro|
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Pseudo-tags ................... |tagbar-pseudotags|
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Supported features ............ |tagbar-features|
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2. Requirements .................... |tagbar-requirements|
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3. Installation .................... |tagbar-installation|
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4. Usage ........................... |tagbar-usage|
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Commands ...................... |tagbar-commands|
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Key mappings .................. |tagbar-keys|
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5. Configuration ................... |tagbar-configuration|
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6. Extending Tagbar ................ |tagbar-extend|
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7. Bugs and limitations ............ |tagbar-bugs|
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8. History ......................... |tagbar-history|
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9. Todo ............................ |tagbar-todo|
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10. Credits ......................... |tagbar-credits|
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==============================================================================
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1. Intro *tagbar-intro*
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Tagbar is a plugin for browsing the tags of source code files. It provides a
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sidebar that displays the ctags-generated tags of the current file, ordered by
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their scope. This means that for example methods in C++ are displayed under
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the class they are defined in.
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Let's say we have the following code inside of a C++ file:
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>
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namespace {
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char a;
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class Foo
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{
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public:
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Foo();
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~Foo();
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private:
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int var;
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};
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};
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<
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Then Tagbar would display the tag information like so:
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>
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__anon1* : namespace
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Foo : class
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+Foo()
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+~Foo()
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-var
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a
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<
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This example shows several important points. First, the tags are listed
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indented below the scope they are defined in. Second, the type of a scope is
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listed after its name and a colon. Third, tags for which the access/visibility
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information is known are prefixed with a symbol indicating that.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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PSEUDO-TAGS *tagbar-pseudotags*
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The example also introduces the concept of "pseudo-tags". Pseudo-tags are tags
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that are not explicitly defined in the file but have children in it. In this
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example the namespace doesn't have a name and thus ctags doesn't generate a
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tag for it, but since it has children it still needs to be displayed using an
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auto-generated name.
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Another case where pseudo-tags appear is in C++ implementation files. Since
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classes are usually defined in a header file but the member methods and
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variables in the implementation file the class itself won't generate a tag
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in that file.
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Since pseudo-tags don't really exist they cannot be jumped to from the Tagbar
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window.
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Pseudo-tags are denoted with an asterisk ('*') at the end of their name.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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SUPPORTED FEATURES *tagbar-features*
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The following features are supported by Tagbar:
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- Display tags under their correct scope.
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- Automatically update the tags when switching between buffers and editing
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files.
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- Display visibility information of tags if available.
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- Highlight the tag near the cursor while editing files.
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- Jump to a tag from the Tagbar window.
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- Display the complete prototype of a tag.
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- Tags can be sorted either by name or order of appearance in the file.
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- Scopes can be folded to hide uninteresting information.
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- Supports all of the languages that ctags does, i.e. Ant, Assembler, ASP,
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Awk, Basic, BETA, C, C++, C#, COBOL, DosBatch, Eiffel, Erlang, Flex,
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Fortran, HTML, Java, JavaScript, Lisp, Lua, Make, MatLab, OCaml, Pascal,
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Perl, PHP, Python, REXX, Ruby, Scheme, Shell script, SLang, SML, SQL, Tcl,
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Tex, Vera, Verilog, VHDL, Vim and YACC.
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- Can be extended to support arbitrary new types.
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==============================================================================
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2. Requirements *tagbar-requirements*
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The following requirements have to be met in order to be able to use tagbar:
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- Vim 7.0 or higher. Older versions will not work since Tagbar uses data
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structures that were only introduced in Vim 7.
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- Exuberant ctags 5.5 or higher. Ctags is the program that generates the
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tag information that Tagbar uses. It is shipped with most Linux
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distributions, otherwise it can be downloaded from the following
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website:
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http://ctags.sourceforge.net/
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Tagbar will work on any platform that ctags runs on -- this includes
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UNIX derivatives, Mac OS X and Windows. Note that other versions like
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GNU ctags will not work.
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Tagbar generates the tag information by itself and doesn't need already
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existing tag files.
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- File type detection must be turned on in vim. This can be done with the
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following command in your vimrc:
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>
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filetype on
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<
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See |filetype| for more information.
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- Tagbar will not work in |restricted-mode|.
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==============================================================================
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3. Installation *tagbar-installation*
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Use the normal Vimball install method for installing tagbar.vba:
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>
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vim tagbar.vba
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:so %
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:q
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<
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Alternatively you can clone the git repository and then add the path to
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'runtimepath' or use the pathogen plugin. Don't forget to run |:helptags| if
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you're not using pathogen.
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If the ctags executable is not installed in one of the directories in your
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$PATH environment variable you have to set the g:tagbar_ctags_bin variable,
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see |g:tagbar_ctags_bin|.
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==============================================================================
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4. Usage *tagbar-usage*
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There are essentially two ways to use Tagbar:
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1. Have it running all the time in a window on the side of the screen. In
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this case Tagbar will update its contents whenever the source file is
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changed and highlight the tag the cursor is currently on in the file. If
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a tag is selected in Tagbar the file window will jump to the tag and the
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Tagbar window will stay open. |g:tagbar_autoclose| has to be unset for
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this mode.
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2. Only open Tagbar when you want to jump to a specific tag and have it
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close automatically once you have selected one. This can be useful for
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example for small screens where a permanent window would take up too much
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space. You have to set the option |g:tagbar_autoclose| in this case. The
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cursor will also automatically jump to the Tagbar window when opening it.
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Opening and closing the Tagbar window~
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Use |:TagbarOpen| or |:TagbarToggle| to open the Tagbar window if it is
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closed. By default the window is opened on the right side, set the option
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|g:tagbar_left| to open it on the left instead. If the window is already open,
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|:TagbarOpen| will jump to it and |:TagbarToggle| will close it again.
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|:TagbarClose| will simply close the window if it is open.
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It is probably a good idea to assign a key to these commands. For example, put
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this in your |vimrc|:
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>
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nnoremap <silent> <F9> :TagbarToggle<CR>
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<
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You can then open and close Tagbar by simply pressing the <F9> key.
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You can also use |:TagbarOpenAutoClose| to open the Tagbar window, jump to it
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and have it close automatically on tag selection regardless of the
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|g:tagbar_autoclose| setting.
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Jumping to tags~
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When you're inside the Tagbar window you can jump to the definition of a tag
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by moving the cursor to a tag and pressing <Enter> or double-clicking on it
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with the mouse. The source file will then move to the definition and put the
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cursor in the corresponding line. This won't work for pseudo-tags.
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Sorting~
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You can sort the tags in the Tagbar window in two ways: by name or by file
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order. Sorting them by name simply displays the tags in their alphabetical
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order under their corresponding scope. Sorting by file order means that the
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tags keep the order they have in the source file, but are still associated
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with the correct scope. You can change the sort order by pressing the "s" key
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in the Tagbar window. The current sort order is displayed in the statusbar of
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the Tagbar window.
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Folding~
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The displayed scopes (and unscoped types) can be folded to hide untinteresting
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information. Unfortunately the folding state is lost once you leave the Tagbar
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window, see |tagbar-bugs|.
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Displaying the prototype of a tag~
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Tagbar can display the prototype of a tag. More precisely it can display the
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line in which the tag is defined. This can be done by either pressing <Space>
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when on a tag or hovering over a tag with the mouse. In the former case the
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prototype will be displayed in the command line |Command-line|, in the latter
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case it will be displayed in a pop-up window. The prototype will also be
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displayed when the cursor stays on a tag for 'updatetime' milliseconds.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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COMMANDS *tagbar-commands*
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:TagbarOpen
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Open the Tagbar if it is closed. In case it is already open jump to it.
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:TagbarClose
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Close the Tagbar window if it is open.
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:TagbarToggle
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Open the Tagbar window if it is closed or close it if it is open.
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:TagbarOpenAutoClose
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Open the Tagbar window and close it on tag selection, regardless of the
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setting of |g:tagbar_autoclose|. If it was already open jump to it.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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KEY MAPPINGS *tagbar-keys*
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These mappings are valid in the Tagbar window:
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<F1> Display key mapping help.
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<CR>/<Enter> Jump to the tag under the cursor. Doesn't work for pseudo-tags.
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<2-LeftMouse> Same as <CR>.
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<Space> Display the prototype of the current tag (i.e. the line defining
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it) in the command line.
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+ Open the fold under the cursor.
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- Close the fold under the cursor.
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* Open all folds.
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= Close all folds.
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s Toggle sort order between name and file order.
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x Toggle zooming the window.
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q Close the Tagbar window.
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==============================================================================
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5. Configuration *tagbar-configuration*
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*g:tagbar_ctags_bin*
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g:tagbar_ctags_bin~
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Use this option to specify the location of your ctags executable. Only needed
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if it is not in one of the directories in your $PATH environment variable.
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Example:
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>
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let g:tagbar_ctags_bin = 'C:\Ctags5.8\ctags.exe'
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<
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*g:tagbar_left*
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g:tagbar_left~
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By default the Tagbar window will be opened on the right-hand side of vim. Set
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this option to open it on the left instead.
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Example:
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>
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let g:tagbar_left = 1
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<
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*g:tagbar_width*
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g:tagbar_width~
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Width of the Tagbar window in characters. The default is 40.
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Example:
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>
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let g:tagbar_width = 30
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<
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*g:tagbar_autoclose*
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g:tagbar_autoclose~
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If you set this option the Tagbar window will automatically close when you
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jump to a tag. The default is to not automatically close the window.
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Example:
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>
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let g:tagbar_autoclose = 1
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<
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*g:tagbar_autofocus*
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g:tagbar_autofocus~
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If you set this option the cursor will move to the Tagbar window when it is
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opened. The default is to not move the cursor to the window.
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Example:
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>
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let g:tagbar_autofocus = 1
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<
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*g:tagbar_sort*
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g:tagbar_sort~
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If this option is set the tags are sorted according to their name. If it is
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unset they are sorted according to their order in the source file. The default
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is to sort them by name.
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Example:
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>
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let g:tagbar_sort = 0
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<
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*g:tagbar_compact*
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g:tagbar_compact~
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Setting this option will result in Tagbar omitting the short help at the
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top of the window and the blank lines in between top-level scopes in order to
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save screen real estate. The default is to not use compact mode.
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Example:
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>
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let g:tagbar_compact = 1
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<
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*g:tagbar_expand*
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g:tagbar_expand~
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If this option is set the Vim window will be expanded by the width of the
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Tagbar window if using a GUI version of Vim. The default is not to expand the
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window.
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Example:
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>
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let g:tagbar_expand = 1
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<
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==============================================================================
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6. Extending Tagbar *tagbar-extend*
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Tagbar has a flexible mechanism for extending the existing file type (i.e.
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language) definitions. This can be used both to change the settings of the
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existing types and to add completely new types.
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Every type definition in Tagbar is a dictionary with the following keys:
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ctagstype: The name of the language as recognized by ctags. Use the command >
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ctags --list-languages
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< to get a list of the languages ctags supports. The case doesn't
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matter.
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kinds: A list of the "language kinds" that should be listed in Tagbar,
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ordered by the order they should appear in in the Tagbar window.
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Use the command >
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ctags --list-kinds={language name}
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< to get a list of the kinds ctags supports for a given language. An
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entry in this list is a string with two parts separated by a
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colon: the first part is the one-character abbreviation that ctags
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uses, and the second part is an arbitrary string that will be used
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in Tagbar as the header for the tags of this kind that are not
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listed under a specific scope. For example, the string >
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"f:functions"
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< would list all the function definitions in a file under the header
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"functions".
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scopes: A list of the scopes that ctags supports for a given language, for
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example classes, structs etc. Unfortunately there is no ctags
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option to list the scopes, you have to look at the tags ctags
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generates manually. For example, let's say we have a C++ file
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"test.cpp" with the following contents: >
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class Foo
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{
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public:
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Foo();
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~Foo();
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private:
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int var;
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};
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< We then run ctags in the followin way: >
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ctags -f - --format=2 --excmd=pattern --fields=nksazSmt --extra= test.cpp
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< Then the output for the variable "var" would look like this: >
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var tmp.cpp /^ int var;$/;" kind:m line:11 class:Foo access:private
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< This shows that the scope name for an entry in a C++ class is
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simply "class". So you would need to put this exact word into the
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"scopes" list. The order again determines the order in which the
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tags will be displayed in Tagbar.
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sro: The scope resolution operator. For example, in C++ it is "::" and
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in Java it is ".". When in doubt run ctags as shown above and look
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at the output.
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kind2scope: A dictionary describing the mapping of tag kinds (in their
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one-character representation) to the scopes their children will
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appear in.
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scope2kind: The opposite of the above, mapping scopes to the kinds of their
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parents. Most of the time it is the exact inverse of the above,
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but in some cases it can be different, for example when more than
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one kind maps to the same scope. If it is the exact inverse for
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your language you only need to specify one of the two keys.
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replace: If you set this entry to 1 your definition will completely replace
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{optional} an existing default definition. This is useful if you want to
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disable scopes for a file type for some reason. Note that in this
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case you have to provide all the needed entries yourself!
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sort: This entry can be used to override the global sort setting for
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{optional} this specific file type. The meaning of the value is the same as
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with the global setting, that is if you want to sort tags by name
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set it to 1 and if you want to sort them according to their order
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in the file set it to 0.
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You then have to assign this dictionary to a variable with the name
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>
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g:tagbar_type_{vim filetype}
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<
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For example, for C++ the name would be "g:tagbar_type_cpp". If you don't know
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the vim file type run the following command:
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>
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:set filetype?
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<
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and vim will display the file type of the current buffer.
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Example: C++~
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Here is a complete example that shows the default configuration for C++ as
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used in Tagbar.
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>
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let g:tagbar_type_cpp = {
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\ 'ctagstype' : 'c++',
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\ 'kinds' : [
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\ 'd:macros',
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\ 'p:prototypes',
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\ 'g:enums',
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\ 'e:enumerators',
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\ 't:typedefs',
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\ 'n:namespaces',
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\ 'c:classes',
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\ 's:structs',
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\ 'u:unions',
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\ 'f:functions',
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\ 'm:members',
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\ 'v:variables'
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\ ],
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\ 'scopes' : [
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\ 'namespace',
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\ 'class',
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\ 'struct',
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\ 'enum',
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\ 'union'
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\ ],
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\ 'sro' : '::',
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\ 'kind2scope' : {
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\ 'g' : 'enum',
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\ 'n' : 'namespace',
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\ 'c' : 'class',
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\ 's' : 'struct',
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\ 'u' : 'union'
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\ },
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\ 'scope2kind' : {
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\ 'enum' : 'g',
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\ 'namespace' : 'n',
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\ 'class' : 'c',
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\ 'struct' : 's',
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\ 'union' : 'u'
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\ }
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\ }
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<
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Which of the keys you have to specify depends on what you want to do.
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Changing an existing definition~
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If you want to change an existing definition you only need to specify the
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parts that you want to change. It probably only makes sense to change "kinds"
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and/or "scopes", which would be the case if you wanted to exclude certain
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kinds from appearing in Tagbar or if you want to change their order. As an
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example, if you didn't want Tagbar to show prototypes for C++ files and switch
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the order of enums and typedefs, you would do it like this:
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>
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let g:tagbar_type_cpp = {
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\ 'kinds' : [
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\ 'd:macros',
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\ 'g:enums',
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\ 't:typedefs',
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\ 'e:enumerators',
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\ 'n:namespaces',
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\ 'c:classes',
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\ 's:structs',
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\ 'u:unions',
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\ 'f:functions',
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\ 'm:members',
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\ 'v:variables'
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\ ]
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\ }
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<
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Compare with the complete example above to see the exact change.
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Adding a definition for a new language/file type~
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In order to be able to add a new language to Tagbar you first have to create a
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configuration for ctags that it can use to parse the files. This can be done
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in two ways:
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1. Use the --regex argument for specifying regular expressions that are used
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to parse the files. An example of this is given below. A disadvantage of
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this approach is that you can't specify scopes.
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2. Write a parser plugin in C for ctags. This approach is much more powerful
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than the regex approach since you can make use of all of ctags'
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functionality but it also requires much more work. Read the ctags
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documentation for more information about how to do this.
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For the first approach the only keys that are needed in the Tagbar definition
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are "ctagstype" and "kinds". A definition that supports scopes has to define
|
|
those two and in addition "scopes", "sro" and at least one of "kind2scope" and
|
|
"scope2kind".
|
|
|
|
Let's assume we want to add support for LaTeX to Tagbar using the regex
|
|
approach. First we put the following text into ~/.ctags:
|
|
>
|
|
--langdef=latex
|
|
--langmap=latex:.tex
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\tableofcontents/TABLE OF CONTENTS/s,toc/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\frontmatter/FRONTMATTER/s,frontmatter/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\mainmatter/MAINMATTER/s,mainmatter/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\backmatter/BACKMATTER/s,backmatter/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\bibliography\{/BIBLIOGRAPHY/s,bibliography/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\part[[:space:]]*(\[[^]]*\])?[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/PART \2/s,part/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\part[[:space:]]*\*[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/PART \1/s,part/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\chapter[[:space:]]*(\[[^]]*\])?[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/CHAP \2/s,chapter/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\chapter[[:space:]]*\*[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/CHAP \1/s,chapter/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\section[[:space:]]*(\[[^]]*\])?[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/\. \2/s,section/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\section[[:space:]]*\*[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/\. \1/s,section/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\subsection[[:space:]]*(\[[^]]*\])?[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/\.\. \2/s,subsection/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\subsection[[:space:]]*\*[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/\.\. \1/s,subsection/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\subsubsection[[:space:]]*(\[[^]]*\])?[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/\.\.\. \2/s,subsubsection/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\subsubsection[[:space:]]*\*[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/\.\.\. \1/s,subsubsection/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\includegraphics[[:space:]]*(\[[^]]*\])?[[:space:]]*(\[[^]]*\])?[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/\3/g,graphic+listing/
|
|
--regex-latex=/^\\lstinputlisting[[:space:]]*(\[[^]]*\])?[[:space:]]*(\[[^]]*\])?[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/\3/g,graphic+listing/
|
|
--regex-latex=/\\label[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/\1/l,label/
|
|
--regex-latex=/\\ref[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/\1/r,ref/
|
|
--regex-latex=/\\pageref[[:space:]]*\{([^}]+)\}/\1/p,pageref/
|
|
<
|
|
This will create a new language definition with the name "latex" and associate
|
|
it with files with the extension ".tex". It will also define the kinds "s" for
|
|
sections, chapters and the like, "g" for included graphics, "l" for labels,
|
|
"r" for references and "p" for page references. See the ctags documentation
|
|
for more information about the exact syntax.
|
|
|
|
Now we have to create the Tagbar language definition in our vimrc:
|
|
>
|
|
let g:tagbar_type_tex = {
|
|
\ 'ctagstype' : 'latex',
|
|
\ 'kinds' : [
|
|
\ 's:sections',
|
|
\ 'g:graphics',
|
|
\ 'l:labels',
|
|
\ 'r:refs',
|
|
\ 'p:pagerefs'
|
|
\ ],
|
|
\ 'sort' : 0
|
|
\ }
|
|
<
|
|
Sort has been disabled for LaTeX so that the sections appear in their correct
|
|
order. They unfortunately can't be shown nested with their correct scopes
|
|
since as already mentioned the regular expression approach doesn't support
|
|
that.
|
|
|
|
Tagbar should now be able to show the sections and other tags from LaTeX
|
|
files.
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
7. Bugs and limitations *tagbar-bugs*
|
|
|
|
- Nested pseudo-tags cannot be properly parsed since only the direct parent
|
|
scope of a tag gets assigned a type, the type of the grandparents is not
|
|
reported by ctags (assuming the grandparents don't have direct, real
|
|
children).
|
|
|
|
For example, if we have a C++ with the following content:
|
|
>
|
|
foo::Bar::init()
|
|
{
|
|
// ...
|
|
}
|
|
foo::Baz::method()
|
|
{
|
|
// ...
|
|
}
|
|
<
|
|
In this case the type of "foo" is not known. Is it a namespace? A class?
|
|
For this reason the methods are displayed in Tagbar like this:
|
|
>
|
|
foo::Bar* : class
|
|
init()
|
|
foo::Baz* : class
|
|
method()
|
|
<
|
|
- Scope-defining tags at the top level that have the same name but a
|
|
different kind/scope type can lead to an incorrect display. For example,
|
|
the following Python code will incorrectly insert a pseudo-tag "Inner2"
|
|
into the "test" class:
|
|
>
|
|
class test:
|
|
class Inner:
|
|
def foo(self):
|
|
pass
|
|
|
|
def test():
|
|
class Inner2:
|
|
def bar(self):
|
|
pass
|
|
<
|
|
I haven't found a clean way around this yet, but it shouldn't be much of a
|
|
problem in practice anyway. Tags with the same name at any other level are
|
|
no problem, though.
|
|
|
|
- The fold state of the Tagbar window is lost when the window is left.
|
|
Again, I don't know of any proper way around this that still allows
|
|
auto-updating -- |winsaveview()| doesn't really help here.
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
8. History *tagbar-history*
|
|
|
|
1.2 (2011-02-28)
|
|
- Fix typo in Ruby definition
|
|
|
|
1.1 (2011-02-26)
|
|
- Don't lose syntax highlighting when ':syntax enable' is called
|
|
- Allow expanding the Vim window when Tagbar is opened
|
|
|
|
1.0 (2011-02-23)
|
|
- Initial release
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
9. Todo *tagbar-todo*
|
|
|
|
- Allow filtering the Tagbar content by some criteria like tag name,
|
|
visibility, kind ...
|
|
- Integrate Tagbar with the FSwitch plugin to provide header file
|
|
information in C/C++.
|
|
- Allow jumping to a tag in the preview window, a split window or a new tab.
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
10. Credits *tagbar-credits*
|
|
|
|
Tagbar was written by Jan Larres and is released under the Vim licence, see
|
|
|license|. It was heavily inspired by the Taglist plugin by Yegappan
|
|
Lakshmanan and uses a small amount of code from it.
|
|
|
|
Original taglist copyright notice:
|
|
Permission is hereby granted to use and distribute this code, with or without
|
|
modifications, provided that this copyright notice is copied with it. Like
|
|
anything else that's free, taglist.vim is provided *as is* and comes with no
|
|
warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied. In no event will the
|
|
copyright holder be liable for any damamges resulting from the use of this
|
|
software.
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
vim: tw=78 ts=8 sw=8 sts=8 noet ft=help
|