# CREATING A VIM TUTORIAL WITH VIM-TUTOR-MODE This tutorial will guide you through the steps required to create a tutorial file for vim-tutor-mode. It is also meant as a demo of vim-tutor-mode capabilities. Table of contents: - [Setting up](*setting-up*) - [vim-tutor-mode's markup](*markup*) - [emphasis](*emphasis*) - [headers](*headers*) - [links](*links*) - [codeblocks](*codeblocks*) - [Interactive elements](*interactive*) - [expect](*expect*) ## SETTING UP *setting-up* First, you'll need to enable "debug" mode ~~~ cmd :let g:tutor_debug = 1 ~~~ This will allow saving changes to the tutor files and will disable conceals, so you can more easily check your changes. After this, create a new .tutor file (we will be practicing on this very file, so you don't need to do this now): ~~~ cmd :e new-tutorial.tutor ~~~ ## VIM-TUTOR-MODE's MARKDOWN *markup* vim-tutor-mode uses a subset of markdown's syntax to format the tutorials. The subset supported should be enough for most tutorials and the maintainers will try to keep it as small as possible (if regular markdown allows for several ways to do the same thing, tutor markdown will only provide the one the maintainers think is easier to handle). ### Emphasis *emphasis* For emphasized text (italics), as in normal markdown, you use \*. E.g.: \*text\* is displayed like *text* Note: The underscores variant is not supported. For strong emphasis (bold), you use \*\*. E.g.: \*\*this\*\* is displayed like **this** 1. Format the line below so it becomes a lesson description: This is text with important information This is text with **important information** Note: Some words (e.g., NOTE, IMPORTANT, tip, ATTENTION, etc.) will also be highlighted. You don't need to mark them specially. 2. Turn the line below into a TODO item: Document '&variable' TODO: Document '&variable' ### Headers *headers* 3. Practice fixing the lines below: This is a level 1 header # This is a level 1 header This is a level 3 header ### This is a level 3 header This is a header with a label # This is a header with a label {*label*} 4. Now, create a 4th level section here, and add a label like in the previous exercise: ATTENTION We will use this label later, so remember it. ### Links *links* It is good practice to include links in your tutorials to reference materials, like vim's own help or external documents. You can also link to other parts of the document. Links have the syntax \[label\]\(target\) #### Help links If the target of a link matches a help topic, opening it will open it. 5. Fix the following line: A link to help for the 'breakindent' option A link to help for the ['breakindent']('breakindent') option #### Anchor links A link can also lead to a place in the file itself. Anchors are written \*anchor\* and are hidden by default. Links to them look like \[label\]\(\*anchor\*\) 6. Add the appropiate link: A link to the Links section A link to the [Links](*links*) section 7. Now, create a link to the section you created on exercise 4 above. # Tutorial links You can also have links to other tutorials. For this, you'll write the anchor in the format @tutor:TUTORIAL 7. Create a link to this tutorial: A link to the vim-tutor-mode tutorial A link to [the vim-tutor-mode tutorial](@tutor:tutor) ### Codeblocks *codeblocks* vim-tutor-mode tutorials can include viml sections ~~~ cmd echom "hello" ~~~ is displayed as ~~~ cmd echom "hello" ~~~ 8. Copy the viml section below ~~~ viml echom 'the value of &number is'.string(&number) ~~~ You can inline viml code using "\`" and "\`{vim}": \`call myFunction()\`{vim} is displayed as `call myFunction()`{vim} [normal](Normal-mode) commands can also be embedded in tutorials. ~~~ normal ftdaW ~~~ is displayed as ~~~ normal ftdaW ~~~ Note: you can also write `norm` or `normal`. 9. Copy the normal section below ~~~ normal d2w ~~~ You can also inline normal commands by using "\`" and "\`{normal}": \`gq\`{normal} is very useful. is displayed: `gq`{normal} is very useful. 10. Complete the line as shown d `d2w`{normal} Commands to run in the system shell can be highlighted by indenting a line starting with "$". ~~~ sh $ vim --version ~~~ ## INTERACTIVE ELEMENTS *interactive* As visible in this very document, vim-tutor-mode includes some interactive elements to provide feedback to the user about his progress. If the text in these elements satisfies some set condition, a ✓ sign will appear in the gutter to the left. Otherwise, a ✗ sign is displayed. ### expect *expect* "expect" lines check that the contents of the line are identical to some preset text (like in the exercises above). These elements are specified in separate JSON files like this ~~~ json { "expect": { "1": "This is how this line should look.", "2": "This is how this line should look.", "3": -1 } } ~~~ These files contain an "expect" dictionary, for which the keys are line numbers and the values are the expected text. A value of -1 means that the condition for the line will always be satisfied, no matter what (this is useful for letting the user play a bit). This is an "expect" line that is always satisfied. Try changing it. These files conventionally have the same name as the tutorial document with the `.json` extension appended (for a full example, see the file that corresponds to this tutorial).