Tell me more ×
Facebook - Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for facebook developers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
Facebook and Stack Exchange are now working together to support the Facebook developer community. Facebook engineers participate here along with the best Facebook developers in the world. If you have a technical question about Facebook, this is the best place to ask.

I'd like to try the plugin for Vim linked below. It adds syntax highlighting for .haml and (perhaps) .sass files.

http://github.com/tpope/vim-haml

I did this...

$ cd ~/.vim
$ git clone git://github.com/tpope/vim-haml.git

I opened a .haml file in Vim, but there's no highlighting. There must be another step I need to perform.

share|improve this question
4  
G'day, Is syntax switched on? (To ask the obvious) – Rob Wells Oct 28 '09 at 19:45
I'm new to Vim. How do I switch syntax on? – Ethan Oct 28 '09 at 19:48
1  
@ethan in normal mode, :syntax on – Karl Guertin Oct 28 '09 at 19:50
Rob and Karl, +1 on the :syntax on comment. Thank you. – Eric Brotto Jun 11 '12 at 22:13

3 Answers

up vote 25 down vote accepted

Those two commands will create a ~/.vim/vim-haml/ directory with the ftplugin, syntax, etc directories in it. Those directories need to be immediately in the ~/.vim directory proper or ~/.vim/vim-haml needs to be added to the list of paths that vim searches for plugins.

Edit:

I recently decided to tweak my vim config and in the process wound up writing the following rakefile. It only works on Mac/Linux, but the advantage over cp versions is that it's completely safe (symlinks don't overwrite existing files, uninstall only deletes symlinks) and easy to keep things updated.

# Easily install vim plugins from a source control checkout (e.g. Github)
#
# alias vim-install=rake -f ~/.vim/rakefile-vim-install
# vim-install
# vim-install uninstall

require 'ftools'
require 'fileutils'

task :default => :install
desc "Install a vim plugin the lazy way"
task :install do
  vim_dir      = File.expand_path("~/.vim")
  plugin_dir   = Dir.pwd

  if not (FileTest.exists? File.join(plugin_dir,".git") or
          FileTest.exists? File.join(plugin_dir,".svn") or
          FileTest.exists? File.join(plugin_dir,".hg"))
      puts "#{plugin_dir} isn't a source controlled directory. Aborting."
      exit 1
  end

  Dir['**/'].each do |d|
    FileUtils.mkdir_p File.join(vim_dir, d)
  end

  Dir["**/*.{txt,snippet,snippets,vim,js,wsf}"].each do |f|
    ln File.join(plugin_dir, f), File.join(vim_dir,f)
  end

  boldred = "\033[1;31m"
  clear = "\033[0m"
  puts "\nDone. Remember to #{boldred}:helptags ~/.vim/doc#{clear}"
end

task :uninstall do
  vim_dir      = File.expand_path("~/.vim")
  plugin_dir   = Dir.pwd
  Dir["**/*.{txt,snippet,snippets,vim}"].each do |f|
    safe_rm File.join(vim_dir, f)
  end
end

def nicename(path)
    boldgreen = "\033[1;32m"
    clear = "\033[0m"
    return "#{boldgreen}#{File.join(path.split('/')[-2..-1])}#{clear}\t"
end

def ln(src, dst)
    begin
        FileUtils.ln_s src, dst
        puts "    Symlink #{nicename src}\t => #{nicename dst}"
    rescue Errno::EEXIST
        puts "  #{nicename dst} exists! Skipping."
    end
end

def cp(src, dst)
  puts "    Copying #{nicename src}\t=> #{nicename dst}"
  FileUtils.cp src, dst
end

def safe_rm(target)
    if FileTest.exists? target and FileTest.symlink? target
        puts "    #{nicename target} removed."
        File.delete target
    else
        puts "  #{nicename target} is not a symlink. Skipping"
    end
end
share|improve this answer
Ah! OK, that makes sense. – Ethan Oct 28 '09 at 19:53

Make sure that the actual .vim file is in ~/.vim/plugin/

share|improve this answer
Thanks for the simple answer! – Drew LeSueur Jun 16 '12 at 15:47

To expand on Karl's reply, Vim looks in a specific set of directories for its runtime files. You can see that set of directories via :set runtimepath?. In order to tell Vim to also look inside ~/.vim/vim-haml you'll want to add

set runtimepath+=$HOME/.vim/vim-haml

to your ~/.vimrc. You'll likely also want the following in your ~/.vimrc to enable all the functionality provided by vim-haml.

filetype plugin indent on
syntax on

You can refer to the 'runtimepath' and :filetype help topics in Vim for more information.

share|improve this answer
Is is "syntax on" or ":syntax on"? Likewise with "filetype"/":filtype". – Ethan Oct 29 '09 at 20:21
2  
When you type them interactively, you need the ':' to enter cmdline mode. In a script, they aren't needed because the script is in cmdline mode, so to speak. Because of that, it's standard practice to omit the ':'s in scripts as all it does is add unnecessary clutter. – jamessan Oct 29 '09 at 21:05

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.