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https://github.com/neovim/neovim.git
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d634cd5b0b
runtime(fortran): update syntax and documentation (vim/vim#13784)
* Update Fortran section of indent.txt
* Small addition to fortran syntax
* Update Fortran section of syntax.txt
* Runtime (Fortran)
Fix regression
* Combine two expressions
d96f25bd69
Co-authored-by: Ajit-Thakkar <142174202+Ajit-Thakkar@users.noreply.github.com>
1231 lines
41 KiB
Plaintext
1231 lines
41 KiB
Plaintext
*indent.txt* Nvim
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VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
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This file is about indenting C programs and other files.
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Type |gO| to see the table of contents.
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==============================================================================
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1. Indenting C style programs *C-indenting*
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The basics for C style indenting are explained in section |30.2| of the user
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manual.
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Vim has options for automatically indenting C style program files. Many
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programming languages including Java and C++ follow very closely the
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formatting conventions established with C. These options affect only the
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indent and do not perform other formatting. There are additional options that
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affect other kinds of formatting as well as indenting, see |format-comments|,
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|fo-table|, |gq| and |formatting| for the main ones.
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There are in fact four main methods available for indentation, each one
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overrides the previous if it is enabled, or non-empty for 'indentexpr':
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'autoindent' uses the indent from the previous line.
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'smartindent' is like 'autoindent' but also recognizes some C syntax to
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increase/reduce the indent where appropriate.
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'cindent' Works more cleverly than the other two and is configurable to
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different indenting styles.
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'indentexpr' The most flexible of all: Evaluates an expression to compute
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the indent of a line. When non-empty this method overrides
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the other ones. See |indent-expression|.
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The rest of this section describes the 'cindent' option.
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Note that 'cindent' indenting does not work for every code scenario. Vim
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is not a C compiler: it does not recognize all syntax. One requirement is
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that toplevel functions have a "{" in the first column. Otherwise they are
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easily confused with declarations.
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These five options control C program indenting:
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'cindent' Enables Vim to perform C program indenting automatically.
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'cinkeys' Specifies which keys trigger reindenting in insert mode.
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'cinoptions' Sets your preferred indent style.
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'cinwords' Defines keywords that start an extra indent in the next line.
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'cinscopedecls' Defines strings that are recognized as a C++ scope declaration.
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If 'lisp' is not on and 'equalprg' is empty, the "=" operator indents using
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Vim's built-in algorithm rather than calling an external program.
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See |autocommand| for how to set the 'cindent' option automatically for C code
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files and reset it for others.
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*cinkeys-format* *indentkeys-format*
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The 'cinkeys' option is a string that controls Vim's indenting in response to
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typing certain characters or commands in certain contexts. Note that this not
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only triggers C-indenting. When 'indentexpr' is not empty 'indentkeys' is
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used instead. The format of 'cinkeys' and 'indentkeys' is equal.
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The default is "0{,0},0),0],:,0#,!^F,o,O,e" which specifies that indenting
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occurs as follows:
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"0{" if you type "{" as the first character in a line
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"0}" if you type "}" as the first character in a line
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"0)" if you type ")" as the first character in a line
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"0]" if you type "]" as the first character in a line
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":" if you type ":" after a label or case statement
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"0#" if you type "#" as the first character in a line
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"!^F" if you type CTRL-F (which is not inserted)
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"o" if you type a <CR> anywhere or use the "o" command (not in
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insert mode!)
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"O" if you use the "O" command (not in insert mode!)
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"e" if you type the second 'e' for an "else" at the start of a
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line
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Characters that can precede each key: *i_CTRL-F*
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! When a "!" precedes the key, Vim will not insert the key but will
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instead reindent the current line. This allows you to define a
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command key for reindenting the current line. CTRL-F is the default
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key for this. Be careful if you define CTRL-I for this because CTRL-I
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is the ASCII code for <Tab>.
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* When a "*" precedes the key, Vim will reindent the line before
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inserting the key. If 'cinkeys' contains "*<Return>", Vim reindents
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the current line before opening a new line.
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0 When a zero precedes the key (but appears after "!" or "*") Vim will
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reindent the line only if the key is the first character you type in
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the line. When used before "=" Vim will only reindent the line if
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there is only white space before the word.
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When neither "!" nor "*" precedes the key, Vim reindents the line after you
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type the key. So ";" sets the indentation of a line which includes the ";".
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Special key names:
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<> Angle brackets mean spelled-out names of keys. For example: "<Up>",
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"<Ins>" (see |key-notation|).
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^ Letters preceded by a caret (^) are control characters. For example:
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"^F" is CTRL-F.
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o Reindent a line when you use the "o" command or when Vim opens a new
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line below the current one (e.g., when you type <Enter> in insert
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mode).
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O Reindent a line when you use the "O" command.
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e Reindent a line that starts with "else" when you type the second 'e'.
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: Reindent a line when a ':' is typed which is after a label or case
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statement. Don't reindent for a ":" in "class::method" for C++. To
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Reindent for any ":", use "<:>".
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=word Reindent when typing the last character of "word". "word" may
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actually be part of another word. Thus "=end" would cause reindenting
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when typing the "d" in "endif" or "endwhile". But not when typing
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"bend". Also reindent when completion produces a word that starts
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with "word". "0=word" reindents when there is only white space before
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the word.
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=~word Like =word, but ignore case.
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If you really want to reindent when you type 'o', 'O', 'e', '0', '<', '>',
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"*", ':' or '!', use "<o>", "<O>", "<e>", "<0>", "<<>", "<>>", "<*>", "<:>" or
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"<!>", respectively, for those keys.
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For an emacs-style indent mode where lines aren't indented every time you
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press <Enter> but only if you press <Tab>, I suggest:
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:set cinkeys=0{,0},:,0#,!<Tab>,!^F
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You might also want to switch off 'autoindent' then.
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Note: If you change the current line's indentation manually, Vim ignores the
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cindent settings for that line. This prevents vim from reindenting after you
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have changed the indent by typing <BS>, <Tab>, or <Space> in the indent or
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used CTRL-T or CTRL-D.
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*cinoptions-values*
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The 'cinoptions' option sets how Vim performs indentation. The value after
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the option character can be one of these (N is any number):
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N indent N spaces
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-N indent N spaces to the left
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Ns N times 'shiftwidth' spaces
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-Ns N times 'shiftwidth' spaces to the left
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In the list below,
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"N" represents a number of your choice (the number can be negative). When
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there is an 's' after the number, Vim multiplies the number by 'shiftwidth':
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"1s" is 'shiftwidth', "2s" is two times 'shiftwidth', etc. You can use a
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decimal point, too: "-0.5s" is minus half a 'shiftwidth'.
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The examples below assume a 'shiftwidth' of 4.
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*cino->*
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>N Amount added for "normal" indent. Used after a line that should
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increase the indent (lines starting with "if", an opening brace,
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etc.). (default 'shiftwidth').
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cino= cino=>2 cino=>2s >
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if (cond) if (cond) if (cond)
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{ { {
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foo; foo; foo;
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} } }
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<
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*cino-e*
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eN Add N to the prevailing indent inside a set of braces if the
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opening brace at the End of the line (more precise: is not the
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first character in a line). This is useful if you want a
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different indent when the "{" is at the start of the line from
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when "{" is at the end of the line. (default 0).
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cino= cino=e2 cino=e-2 >
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if (cond) { if (cond) { if (cond) {
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foo; foo; foo;
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} } }
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else else else
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{ { {
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bar; bar; bar;
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} } }
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<
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*cino-n*
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nN Add N to the prevailing indent for a statement after an "if",
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"while", etc., if it is NOT inside a set of braces. This is
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useful if you want a different indent when there is no "{"
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before the statement from when there is a "{" before it.
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(default 0).
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cino= cino=n2 cino=n-2 >
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if (cond) if (cond) if (cond)
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foo; foo; foo;
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else else else
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{ { {
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bar; bar; bar;
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} } }
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<
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*cino-f*
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fN Place the first opening brace of a function or other block in
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column N. This applies only for an opening brace that is not
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inside other braces and is at the start of the line. What comes
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after the brace is put relative to this brace. (default 0).
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cino= cino=f.5s cino=f1s >
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func() func() func()
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{ { {
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int foo; int foo; int foo;
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<
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*cino-{*
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`{N` Place opening braces N characters from the prevailing indent.
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This applies only for opening braces that are inside other
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braces. (default 0).
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cino= cino={.5s cino={1s >
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if (cond) if (cond) if (cond)
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{ { {
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foo; foo; foo;
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<
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*cino-}*
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`}N` Place closing braces N characters from the matching opening
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brace. (default 0).
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cino= cino={2,}-0.5s cino=}2 >
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if (cond) if (cond) if (cond)
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{ { {
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foo; foo; foo;
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} } }
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<
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*cino-^*
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^N Add N to the prevailing indent inside a set of braces if the
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opening brace is in column 0. This can specify a different
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indent for whole of a function (some may like to set it to a
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negative number). (default 0).
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cino= cino=^-2 cino=^-s >
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func() func() func()
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{ { {
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if (cond) if (cond) if (cond)
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{ { {
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a = b; a = b; a = b;
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} } }
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} } }
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<
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*cino-L*
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LN Controls placement of jump labels. If N is negative, the label
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will be placed at column 1. If N is non-negative, the indent of
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the label will be the prevailing indent minus N. (default -1).
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cino= cino=L2 cino=Ls >
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func() func() func()
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{ { {
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{ { {
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stmt; stmt; stmt;
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LABEL: LABEL: LABEL:
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} } }
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} } }
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<
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*cino-:*
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:N Place case labels N characters from the indent of the switch().
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(default 'shiftwidth').
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cino= cino=:0 >
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switch (x) switch(x)
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{ {
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case 1: case 1:
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a = b; a = b;
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default: default:
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} }
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<
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*cino-=*
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=N Place statements occurring after a case label N characters from
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the indent of the label. (default 'shiftwidth').
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cino= cino==10 >
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case 11: case 11: a = a + 1;
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a = a + 1; b = b + 1;
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<
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*cino-l*
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lN If N != 0 Vim will align with a case label instead of the
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statement after it in the same line.
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cino= cino=l1 >
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switch (a) { switch (a) {
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case 1: { case 1: {
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break; break;
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} }
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<
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*cino-b*
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bN If N != 0 Vim will align a final "break" with the case label,
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so that case..break looks like a sort of block. (default: 0).
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When using 1, consider adding "0=break" to 'cinkeys'.
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cino= cino=b1 >
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switch (x) switch(x)
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{ {
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case 1: case 1:
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a = b; a = b;
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break; break;
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default: default:
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a = 0; a = 0;
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break; break;
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} }
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<
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*cino-g*
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gN Place C++ scope declarations N characters from the indent of the
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block they are in. (default 'shiftwidth'). By default, a scope
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declaration is "public:", "protected:" or "private:". This can
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be adjusted with the 'cinscopedecls' option.
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cino= cino=g0 >
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{ {
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public: public:
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a = b; a = b;
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private: private:
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} }
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<
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*cino-h*
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hN Place statements occurring after a C++ scope declaration N
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characters from the indent of the label. (default
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'shiftwidth').
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cino= cino=h10 >
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public: public: a = a + 1;
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a = a + 1; b = b + 1;
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<
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*cino-N*
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NN Indent inside C++ namespace N characters extra compared to a
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normal block. (default 0).
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cino= cino=N-s >
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namespace { namespace {
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void function(); void function();
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} }
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namespace my namespace my
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{ {
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void function(); void function();
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} }
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<
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*cino-E*
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EN Indent inside C++ linkage specifications (extern "C" or
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extern "C++") N characters extra compared to a normal block.
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(default 0).
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cino= cino=E-s >
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extern "C" { extern "C" {
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void function(); void function();
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} }
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extern "C" extern "C"
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{ {
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void function(); void function();
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} }
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<
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*cino-p*
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pN Parameter declarations for K&R-style function declarations will
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be indented N characters from the margin. (default
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'shiftwidth').
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cino= cino=p0 cino=p2s >
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func(a, b) func(a, b) func(a, b)
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int a; int a; int a;
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char b; char b; char b;
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<
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*cino-t*
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tN Indent a function return type declaration N characters from the
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margin. (default 'shiftwidth').
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cino= cino=t0 cino=t7 >
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int int int
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func() func() func()
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<
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*cino-i*
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iN Indent C++ base class declarations and constructor
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initializations, if they start in a new line (otherwise they
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are aligned at the right side of the ':').
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(default 'shiftwidth').
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cino= cino=i0 >
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class MyClass : class MyClass :
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public BaseClass public BaseClass
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{} {}
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MyClass::MyClass() : MyClass::MyClass() :
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BaseClass(3) BaseClass(3)
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{} {}
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<
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*cino-+*
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+N Indent a continuation line (a line that spills onto the next)
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inside a function N additional characters. (default
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'shiftwidth').
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Outside of a function, when the previous line ended in a
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backslash, the 2 * N is used.
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cino= cino=+10 >
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a = b + 9 * a = b + 9 *
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c; c;
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<
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*cino-c*
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cN Indent comment lines after the comment opener, when there is no
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other text with which to align, N characters from the comment
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opener. (default 3). See also |format-comments|.
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cino= cino=c5 >
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/* /*
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text. text.
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*/ */
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<
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*cino-C*
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CN When N is non-zero, indent comment lines by the amount specified
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with the c flag above even if there is other text behind the
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comment opener. (default 0).
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cino=c0 cino=c0,C1 >
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/******** /********
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text. text.
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********/ ********/
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< (Example uses ":set comments& comments-=s1:/* comments^=s0:/*")
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*cino-/*
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/N Indent comment lines N characters extra. (default 0).
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cino= cino=/4 >
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a = b; a = b;
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/* comment */ /* comment */
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c = d; c = d;
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<
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*cino-(*
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(N When in unclosed parentheses, indent N characters from the line
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with the unclosed parenthesis. Add a 'shiftwidth' for every
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extra unclosed parentheses. When N is 0 or the unclosed
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parenthesis is the first non-white character in its line, line
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up with the next non-white character after the unclosed
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parenthesis. (default 'shiftwidth' * 2).
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cino= cino=(0 >
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if (c1 && (c2 || if (c1 && (c2 ||
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c3)) c3))
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foo; foo;
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if (c1 && if (c1 &&
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(c2 || c3)) (c2 || c3))
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{ {
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<
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*cino-u*
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uN Same as (N, but for one nesting level deeper.
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(default 'shiftwidth').
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cino= cino=u2 >
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if (c123456789 if (c123456789
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&& (c22345 && (c22345
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|| c3)) || c3))
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<
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*cino-U*
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UN When N is non-zero, do not ignore the indenting specified by
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( or u in case that the unclosed parenthesis is the first
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non-white character in its line. (default 0).
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cino= or cino=(s cino=(s,U1 >
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c = c1 && c = c1 &&
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( (
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c2 || c2 ||
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c3 c3
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) && c4; ) && c4;
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<
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*cino-w*
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wN When in unclosed parentheses and N is non-zero and either
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using "(0" or "u0", respectively, or using "U0" and the unclosed
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parenthesis is the first non-white character in its line, line
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up with the character immediately after the unclosed parenthesis
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rather than the first non-white character. (default 0).
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cino=(0 cino=(0,w1 >
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if ( c1 if ( c1
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&& ( c2 && ( c2
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|| c3)) || c3))
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foo; foo;
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<
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*cino-W*
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WN When in unclosed parentheses and N is non-zero and either
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using "(0" or "u0", respectively and the unclosed parenthesis is
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the last non-white character in its line and it is not the
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closing parenthesis, indent the following line N characters
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relative to the outer context (i.e. start of the line or the
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next unclosed parenthesis). (default: 0).
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cino=(0 cino=(0,W4 >
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a_long_line( a_long_line(
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argument, argument,
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argument); argument);
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a_short_line(argument, a_short_line(argument,
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argument); argument);
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<
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*cino-k*
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kN When in unclosed parentheses which follow "if", "for" or
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"while" and N is non-zero, overrides the behaviour defined by
|
|
"(N": causes the indent to be N characters relative to the outer
|
|
context (i.e. the line where "if", "for" or "while" is). Has
|
|
no effect on deeper levels of nesting. Affects flags like "wN"
|
|
only for the "if", "for" and "while" conditions. If 0, defaults
|
|
to behaviour defined by the "(N" flag. (default: 0).
|
|
|
|
cino=(0 cino=(0,ks >
|
|
if (condition1 if (condition1
|
|
&& condition2) && condition2)
|
|
action(); action();
|
|
function(argument1 function(argument1
|
|
&& argument2); && argument2);
|
|
<
|
|
*cino-m*
|
|
mN When N is non-zero, line up a line starting with a closing
|
|
parenthesis with the first character of the line with the
|
|
matching opening parenthesis. (default 0).
|
|
|
|
cino=(s cino=(s,m1 >
|
|
c = c1 && ( c = c1 && (
|
|
c2 || c2 ||
|
|
c3 c3
|
|
) && c4; ) && c4;
|
|
if ( if (
|
|
c1 && c2 c1 && c2
|
|
) )
|
|
foo; foo;
|
|
<
|
|
*cino-M*
|
|
MN When N is non-zero, line up a line starting with a closing
|
|
parenthesis with the first character of the previous line.
|
|
(default 0).
|
|
|
|
cino= cino=M1 >
|
|
if (cond1 && if (cond1 &&
|
|
cond2 cond2
|
|
) )
|
|
<
|
|
*java-cinoptions* *java-indenting* *cino-j*
|
|
jN Indent Java anonymous classes correctly. Also works well for
|
|
Javascript. The value 'N' is currently unused but must be
|
|
non-zero (e.g. 'j1'). 'j1' will indent for example the
|
|
following code snippet correctly: >
|
|
|
|
object.add(new ChangeListener() {
|
|
public void stateChanged(ChangeEvent e) {
|
|
do_something();
|
|
}
|
|
});
|
|
<
|
|
*javascript-cinoptions* *javascript-indenting* *cino-J*
|
|
JN Indent JavaScript object declarations correctly by not confusing
|
|
them with labels. The value 'N' is currently unused but must be
|
|
non-zero (e.g. 'J1'). If you enable this you probably also want
|
|
to set |cino-j|. >
|
|
|
|
var bar = {
|
|
foo: {
|
|
that: this,
|
|
some: ok,
|
|
},
|
|
"bar":{
|
|
a : 2,
|
|
b: "123abc",
|
|
x: 4,
|
|
"y": 5
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
<
|
|
*cino-)*
|
|
)N Vim searches for unclosed parentheses at most N lines away.
|
|
This limits the time needed to search for parentheses. (default
|
|
20 lines).
|
|
|
|
*cino-star*
|
|
`*N` Vim searches for unclosed comments at most N lines away. This
|
|
limits the time needed to search for the start of a comment.
|
|
If your `/* */` comments stop indenting after N lines this is the
|
|
value you will want to change.
|
|
(default 70 lines).
|
|
|
|
*cino-#*
|
|
#N When N is non-zero recognize shell/Perl comments starting with
|
|
'#', do not recognize preprocessor lines; allow right-shifting
|
|
lines that start with "#".
|
|
When N is zero (default): don't recognize '#' comments, do
|
|
recognize preprocessor lines; right-shifting lines that start
|
|
with "#" does not work.
|
|
|
|
*cino-P*
|
|
PN When N is non-zero recognize C pragmas, and indent them like any
|
|
other code; does not concern other preprocessor directives.
|
|
When N is zero (default): don't recognize C pragmas, treating
|
|
them like every other preprocessor directive.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The defaults, spelled out in full, are: >
|
|
cinoptions=>s,e0,n0,f0,{0,}0,^0,L-1,:s,=s,l0,b0,gs,hs,N0,E0,ps,ts,is,+s,
|
|
c3,C0,/0,(2s,us,U0,w0,W0,k0,m0,j0,J0,)20,*70,#0,P0
|
|
|
|
Vim puts a line in column 1 if:
|
|
- It starts with '#' (preprocessor directives), if 'cinkeys' contains '#0'.
|
|
- It starts with a label (a keyword followed by ':', other than "case" and
|
|
"default") and 'cinoptions' does not contain an 'L' entry with a positive
|
|
value.
|
|
- Any combination of indentations causes the line to have less than 0
|
|
indentation.
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
2. Indenting by expression *indent-expression*
|
|
|
|
The basics for using flexible indenting are explained in section |30.3| of the
|
|
user manual.
|
|
|
|
If you want to write your own indent file, it must set the 'indentexpr'
|
|
option. Setting the 'indentkeys' option is often useful.
|
|
See the $VIMRUNTIME/indent/README.txt file for hints.
|
|
See the $VIMRUNTIME/indent directory for examples.
|
|
|
|
|
|
REMARKS ABOUT SPECIFIC INDENT FILES ~
|
|
|
|
|
|
CLOJURE *ft-clojure-indent* *clojure-indent*
|
|
|
|
Clojure indentation differs somewhat from traditional Lisps, due in part to
|
|
the use of square and curly brackets, and otherwise by community convention.
|
|
These conventions are not universally followed, so the Clojure indent script
|
|
offers a few configuration options.
|
|
|
|
|
|
*g:clojure_maxlines*
|
|
|
|
Sets maximum scan distance of `searchpairpos()`. Larger values trade
|
|
performance for correctness when dealing with very long forms. A value of
|
|
0 will scan without limits. The default is 300.
|
|
|
|
|
|
*g:clojure_fuzzy_indent*
|
|
*g:clojure_fuzzy_indent_patterns*
|
|
*g:clojure_fuzzy_indent_blacklist*
|
|
|
|
The 'lispwords' option is a list of comma-separated words that mark special
|
|
forms whose subforms should be indented with two spaces.
|
|
|
|
For example:
|
|
>
|
|
(defn bad []
|
|
"Incorrect indentation")
|
|
|
|
(defn good []
|
|
"Correct indentation")
|
|
<
|
|
If you would like to specify 'lispwords' with a |pattern| instead, you can use
|
|
the fuzzy indent feature:
|
|
>
|
|
" Default
|
|
let g:clojure_fuzzy_indent = 1
|
|
let g:clojure_fuzzy_indent_patterns = ['^with', '^def', '^let']
|
|
let g:clojure_fuzzy_indent_blacklist =
|
|
\ ['-fn$', '\v^with-%(meta|out-str|loading-context)$']
|
|
<
|
|
|g:clojure_fuzzy_indent_patterns| and |g:clojure_fuzzy_indent_blacklist| are
|
|
lists of patterns that will be matched against the unqualified symbol at the
|
|
head of a list. This means that a pattern like `"^foo"` will match all these
|
|
candidates: `foobar`, `my.ns/foobar`, and `#'foobar`.
|
|
|
|
Each candidate word is tested for special treatment in this order:
|
|
|
|
1. Return true if word is literally in 'lispwords'
|
|
2. Return false if word matches a pattern in
|
|
|g:clojure_fuzzy_indent_blacklist|
|
|
3. Return true if word matches a pattern in
|
|
|g:clojure_fuzzy_indent_patterns|
|
|
4. Return false and indent normally otherwise
|
|
|
|
|
|
*g:clojure_special_indent_words*
|
|
|
|
Some forms in Clojure are indented such that every subform is indented by only
|
|
two spaces, regardless of 'lispwords'. If you have a custom construct that
|
|
should be indented in this idiosyncratic fashion, you can add your symbols to
|
|
the default list below.
|
|
>
|
|
" Default
|
|
let g:clojure_special_indent_words =
|
|
\ 'deftype,defrecord,reify,proxy,extend-type,extend-protocol,letfn'
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
*g:clojure_align_multiline_strings*
|
|
|
|
Align subsequent lines in multi-line strings to the column after the opening
|
|
quote, instead of the same column.
|
|
|
|
For example:
|
|
>
|
|
(def default
|
|
"Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do
|
|
eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut
|
|
enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris
|
|
nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.")
|
|
|
|
(def aligned
|
|
"Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do
|
|
eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut
|
|
enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris
|
|
nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.")
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
*g:clojure_align_subforms*
|
|
|
|
By default, parenthesized compound forms that look like function calls and
|
|
whose head subform is on its own line have subsequent subforms indented by
|
|
two spaces relative to the opening paren:
|
|
>
|
|
(foo
|
|
bar
|
|
baz)
|
|
<
|
|
Setting this option to `1` changes this behaviour so that all subforms are
|
|
aligned to the same column, emulating the default behaviour of
|
|
clojure-mode.el:
|
|
>
|
|
(foo
|
|
bar
|
|
baz)
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
FORTRAN *ft-fortran-indent*
|
|
|
|
Block if, select case, select type, select rank, where, forall, type,
|
|
interface, associate, block, enum, critical, and change team constructs are
|
|
indented. The indenting of subroutines, functions, modules, and program blocks
|
|
is optional. Comments, labeled statements, and continuation lines are indented
|
|
if the Fortran is in free source form, whereas they are not indented if the
|
|
Fortran is in fixed source form because of the left margin requirements. Hence
|
|
manual indent corrections will be necessary for labeled statements and
|
|
continuation lines when fixed source form is being used. For further
|
|
discussion of the method used for the detection of source format see
|
|
|ft-fortran-syntax|.
|
|
|
|
Do loops ~
|
|
All do loops are left unindented by default. Do loops can be unstructured in
|
|
Fortran with (possibly multiple) loops ending on a labeled executable
|
|
statement of almost arbitrary type. Correct indentation requires
|
|
compiler-quality parsing. Old code with do loops ending on labeled statements
|
|
of arbitrary type can be indented with elaborate programs such as Tidy.
|
|
Structured do/continue loops are also left unindented because continue
|
|
statements are used for purposes other than ending a do loop. Programs such
|
|
as Tidy can convert structured do/continue loops to the do/enddo form. Do
|
|
loops of the do/enddo variety can be indented. If you use only structured
|
|
loops of the do/enddo form, you should declare this by setting the
|
|
fortran_do_enddo variable in your vimrc as follows >
|
|
|
|
let fortran_do_enddo=1
|
|
|
|
in which case do loops will be indented. If all your loops are of do/enddo
|
|
type only in, say, .f90 files, then you should set a buffer flag with an
|
|
autocommand such as >
|
|
|
|
au! BufRead,BufNewFile *.f90 let b:fortran_do_enddo=1
|
|
|
|
to get do loops indented in .f90 files and left alone in Fortran files with
|
|
other extensions such as .for.
|
|
|
|
Program units ~
|
|
Indenting of program units (subroutines, functions, modules, and program
|
|
blocks) can be increased by setting the variable fortran_indent_more and can
|
|
be decreased by setting the variable fortran_indent_less. These variables
|
|
can be set for all fortran files in your vimrc as follows >
|
|
|
|
let fortran_indent_less=1
|
|
|
|
A finer level of control can be achieved by setting the corresponding
|
|
buffer-local variable as follows >
|
|
|
|
let b:fortran_indent_less=1
|
|
|
|
|
|
HTML *ft-html-indent* *html-indent* *html-indenting*
|
|
|
|
This is about variables you can set in your vimrc to customize HTML indenting.
|
|
|
|
You can set the indent for the first line after <script> and <style>
|
|
"blocktags" (default "zero"): >
|
|
|
|
:let g:html_indent_script1 = "inc"
|
|
:let g:html_indent_style1 = "inc"
|
|
<
|
|
VALUE MEANING ~
|
|
"zero" zero indent
|
|
"auto" auto indent (same indent as the blocktag)
|
|
"inc" auto indent + one indent step
|
|
|
|
You can set the indent for attributes after an open <tag line: >
|
|
|
|
:let g:html_indent_attribute = 1
|
|
<
|
|
VALUE MEANING ~
|
|
1 auto indent, one indent step more than <tag
|
|
2 auto indent, two indent steps (default)
|
|
> 2 auto indent, more indent steps
|
|
|
|
Many tags increase the indent for what follows per default (see "Add Indent
|
|
Tags" in the script). You can add further tags with: >
|
|
|
|
:let g:html_indent_inctags = "html,body,head,tbody"
|
|
|
|
You can also remove such tags with: >
|
|
|
|
:let g:html_indent_autotags = "th,td,tr,tfoot,thead"
|
|
|
|
Default value is empty for both variables. Note: the initial "inctags" are
|
|
only defined once per Vim session.
|
|
|
|
User variables are only read when the script is sourced. To enable your
|
|
changes during a session, without reloading the HTML file, you can manually
|
|
do: >
|
|
|
|
:call HtmlIndent_CheckUserSettings()
|
|
|
|
Detail:
|
|
Calculation of indent inside "blocktags" with "alien" content:
|
|
BLOCKTAG INDENT EXPR WHEN APPLICABLE ~
|
|
<script> : {customizable} if first line of block
|
|
: cindent(v:lnum) if attributes empty or contain "java"
|
|
: -1 else (vbscript, tcl, ...)
|
|
<style> : {customizable} if first line of block
|
|
: GetCSSIndent() else
|
|
<!-- --> : -1
|
|
|
|
|
|
MATLAB *ft-matlab-indent* *matlab-indent* *matlab-indenting*
|
|
|
|
The setting Function indenting format in MATLAB Editor/Debugger Language
|
|
Preferences corresponds to: >
|
|
:let g:MATLAB_function_indent = {0, 1 or 2 (default)}
|
|
|
|
Where 0 is for Classic, 1 for Indent nested functions and 2 for Indent all
|
|
functions.
|
|
|
|
|
|
PHP *ft-php-indent* *php-indent* *php-indenting*
|
|
|
|
NOTE: PHP files will be indented correctly only if PHP |syntax| is active.
|
|
|
|
If you are editing a file in Unix 'fileformat' and '\r' characters are present
|
|
before new lines, indentation won't proceed correctly ; you have to remove
|
|
those useless characters first with a command like: >
|
|
|
|
:%s /\r$//g
|
|
|
|
Or, you can simply |:let| the variable PHP_removeCRwhenUnix to 1 and the
|
|
script will silently remove them when Vim loads a PHP file (at each |BufRead|).
|
|
|
|
OPTIONS: ~
|
|
|
|
PHP indenting can be altered in several ways by modifying the values of some
|
|
global variables:
|
|
|
|
*php-comment* *PHP_autoformatcomment*
|
|
To not enable auto-formatting of comments by default (if you want to use your
|
|
own 'formatoptions'): >
|
|
:let g:PHP_autoformatcomment = 0
|
|
|
|
Else, 't' will be removed from the 'formatoptions' string and "qrowcb" will be
|
|
added, see |fo-table| for more information.
|
|
|
|
|
|
*PHP_outdentSLComments*
|
|
To add extra indentation to single-line comments: >
|
|
:let g:PHP_outdentSLComments = N
|
|
|
|
With N being the number of 'shiftwidth' to add.
|
|
|
|
Only single-line comments will be affected such as: >
|
|
# Comment
|
|
// Comment
|
|
/* Comment */
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
*PHP_default_indenting*
|
|
To add extra indentation to every PHP lines with N being the number of
|
|
'shiftwidth' to add: >
|
|
:let g:PHP_default_indenting = N
|
|
|
|
For example, with N = 1, this will give:
|
|
>
|
|
<?php
|
|
if (!isset($History_lst_sel))
|
|
if (!isset($History_lst_sel))
|
|
if (!isset($History_lst_sel)) {
|
|
$History_lst_sel=0;
|
|
} else
|
|
$foo="bar";
|
|
|
|
$command_hist = TRUE;
|
|
?>
|
|
(Notice the extra indentation between the PHP container markers and the code)
|
|
|
|
*PHP_outdentphpescape*
|
|
To indent PHP escape tags as the surrounding non-PHP code (only affects the
|
|
PHP escape tags): >
|
|
:let g:PHP_outdentphpescape = 0
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
*PHP_removeCRwhenUnix*
|
|
To automatically remove '\r' characters when the 'fileformat' is set to Unix: >
|
|
:let g:PHP_removeCRwhenUnix = 1
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
*PHP_BracesAtCodeLevel*
|
|
To indent braces at the same level than the code they contain: >
|
|
:let g:PHP_BracesAtCodeLevel = 1
|
|
|
|
This will give the following result: >
|
|
if ($foo)
|
|
{
|
|
foo();
|
|
}
|
|
Instead of: >
|
|
if ($foo)
|
|
{
|
|
foo();
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
NOTE: Indenting will be a bit slower if this option is used because some
|
|
optimizations won't be available.
|
|
|
|
*PHP_vintage_case_default_indent*
|
|
To indent 'case:' and 'default:' statements in switch() blocks: >
|
|
:let g:PHP_vintage_case_default_indent = 1
|
|
|
|
In PHP braces are not required inside 'case/default' blocks therefore 'case:'
|
|
and 'default:' are indented at the same level than the 'switch()' to avoid
|
|
meaningless indentation. You can use the above option to return to the
|
|
traditional way.
|
|
|
|
*PHP_noArrowMatching*
|
|
By default the indent script will indent multi-line chained calls by matching
|
|
the position of the '->': >
|
|
|
|
$user_name_very_long->name()
|
|
->age()
|
|
->info();
|
|
<
|
|
You can revert to the classic way of indenting by setting this option to 1: >
|
|
:let g:PHP_noArrowMatching = 1
|
|
<
|
|
You will obtain the following result: >
|
|
|
|
$user_name_very_long->name()
|
|
->age()
|
|
->info();
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
*PHP_IndentFunctionCallParameters*
|
|
Extra indentation levels to add to parameters in multi-line function calls. >
|
|
let g:PHP_IndentFunctionCallParameters = 1
|
|
|
|
Function call arguments will indent 1 extra level. For two-space indentation: >
|
|
|
|
function call_the_thing(
|
|
$with_this,
|
|
$and_that
|
|
) {
|
|
$this->do_the_thing(
|
|
$with_this,
|
|
$and_that
|
|
);
|
|
}
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
*PHP_IndentFunctionDeclarationParameters*
|
|
Extra indentation levels to add to arguments in multi-line function
|
|
definitions. >
|
|
let g:PHP_IndentFunctionDeclarationParameters = 1
|
|
<
|
|
Function arguments in declarations will indent 1 extra level. For two-space
|
|
indentation: >
|
|
|
|
function call_the_thing(
|
|
$with_this,
|
|
$and_that
|
|
) {
|
|
$this->do_the_thing(
|
|
$with_this,
|
|
$and_that
|
|
);
|
|
}
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
PYTHON *ft-python-indent*
|
|
|
|
The amount of indent can be set with the `g:python_indent` |Dictionary|, which
|
|
needs to be created before adding the items: >
|
|
let g:python_indent = {}
|
|
The examples given are the defaults. Note that the dictionary values are set
|
|
to an expression, so that you can change the value of 'shiftwidth' later
|
|
without having to update these values.
|
|
|
|
Indent after an open paren: >
|
|
let g:python_indent.open_paren = 'shiftwidth() * 2'
|
|
Indent after a nested paren: >
|
|
let g:python_indent.nested_paren = 'shiftwidth()'
|
|
Indent for a continuation line: >
|
|
let g:python_indent.continue = 'shiftwidth() * 2'
|
|
|
|
By default, the closing paren on a multiline construct lines up under the first
|
|
non-whitespace character of the previous line.
|
|
If you prefer that it's lined up under the first character of the line that
|
|
starts the multiline construct, reset this key: >
|
|
let g:python_indent.closed_paren_align_last_line = v:false
|
|
|
|
The method uses |searchpair()| to look back for unclosed parentheses. This
|
|
can sometimes be slow, thus it timeouts after 150 msec. If you notice the
|
|
indenting isn't correct, you can set a larger timeout in msec: >
|
|
let g:python_indent.searchpair_timeout = 500
|
|
|
|
If looking back for unclosed parenthesis is still too slow, especially during
|
|
a copy-paste operation, or if you don't need indenting inside multi-line
|
|
parentheses, you can completely disable this feature: >
|
|
let g:python_indent.disable_parentheses_indenting = 1
|
|
|
|
For backward compatibility, these variables are also supported: >
|
|
g:pyindent_open_paren
|
|
g:pyindent_nested_paren
|
|
g:pyindent_continue
|
|
g:pyindent_searchpair_timeout
|
|
g:pyindent_disable_parentheses_indenting
|
|
|
|
|
|
R *ft-r-indent*
|
|
|
|
Function arguments are aligned if they span for multiple lines. If you prefer
|
|
do not have the arguments of functions aligned, put in your |vimrc|:
|
|
>
|
|
let r_indent_align_args = 0
|
|
<
|
|
All lines beginning with a comment character, #, get the same indentation
|
|
level of the normal R code. Users of Emacs/ESS may be used to have lines
|
|
beginning with a single # indented in the 40th column, ## indented as R code,
|
|
and ### not indented. If you prefer that lines beginning with comment
|
|
characters are aligned as they are by Emacs/ESS, put in your |vimrc|:
|
|
>
|
|
let r_indent_ess_comments = 1
|
|
<
|
|
If you prefer that lines beginning with a single # are aligned at a column
|
|
different from the 40th one, you should set a new value to the variable
|
|
r_indent_comment_column, as in the example below:
|
|
>
|
|
let r_indent_comment_column = 30
|
|
<
|
|
Any code after a line that ends with "<-" is indented. Emacs/ESS does not
|
|
indent the code if it is a top-level function. If you prefer a behavior like
|
|
Emacs/ESS one in this regard, put in your |vimrc|:
|
|
>
|
|
let r_indent_ess_compatible = 1
|
|
<
|
|
Below is an example of indentation with and without this option enabled:
|
|
>
|
|
### r_indent_ess_compatible = 1 ### r_indent_ess_compatible = 0
|
|
foo <- foo <-
|
|
function(x) function(x)
|
|
{ {
|
|
paste(x) paste(x)
|
|
} }
|
|
<
|
|
The code will be indented after lines that match the pattern
|
|
`'\(&\||\|+\|-\|\*\|/\|=\|\~\|%\|->\)\s*$'`. If you want indentation after
|
|
lines that match a different pattern, you should set the appropriate value of
|
|
`r_indent_op_pattern` in your |vimrc|.
|
|
|
|
|
|
SHELL *ft-sh-indent*
|
|
|
|
The amount of indent applied under various circumstances in a shell file can
|
|
be configured by setting the following keys in the |Dictionary|
|
|
b:sh_indent_defaults to a specific amount or to a |Funcref| that references a
|
|
function that will return the amount desired:
|
|
|
|
b:sh_indent_options["default"] Default amount of indent.
|
|
|
|
b:sh_indent_options["continuation-line"]
|
|
Amount of indent to add to a continued line.
|
|
|
|
b:sh_indent_options["case-labels"]
|
|
Amount of indent to add for case labels.
|
|
(not actually implemented)
|
|
|
|
b:sh_indent_options["case-statements"]
|
|
Amount of indent to add for case statements.
|
|
|
|
b:sh_indent_options["case-breaks"]
|
|
Amount of indent to add (or more likely
|
|
remove) for case breaks.
|
|
|
|
VERILOG *ft-verilog-indent*
|
|
|
|
General block statements such as if, for, case, always, initial, function,
|
|
specify and begin, etc., are indented. The module block statements (first
|
|
level blocks) are not indented by default. you can turn on the indent with
|
|
setting a variable in the vimrc as follows: >
|
|
|
|
let b:verilog_indent_modules = 1
|
|
|
|
then the module blocks will be indented. To stop this, remove the variable: >
|
|
|
|
:unlet b:verilog_indent_modules
|
|
|
|
To set the variable only for Verilog file. The following statements can be
|
|
used: >
|
|
|
|
au BufReadPost * if exists("b:current_syntax")
|
|
au BufReadPost * if b:current_syntax == "verilog"
|
|
au BufReadPost * let b:verilog_indent_modules = 1
|
|
au BufReadPost * endif
|
|
au BufReadPost * endif
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, setting the variable b:verilog_indent_width to change the
|
|
indenting width (default is 'shiftwidth'): >
|
|
|
|
let b:verilog_indent_width = 4
|
|
let b:verilog_indent_width = shiftwidth() * 2
|
|
|
|
In addition, you can turn the verbose mode for debug issue: >
|
|
|
|
let b:verilog_indent_verbose = 1
|
|
|
|
Make sure to do ":set cmdheight=2" first to allow the display of the message.
|
|
|
|
|
|
VHDL *ft-vhdl-indent*
|
|
|
|
Alignment of generic/port mapping statements are performed by default. This
|
|
causes the following alignment example: >
|
|
|
|
ENTITY sync IS
|
|
PORT (
|
|
clk : IN STD_LOGIC;
|
|
reset_n : IN STD_LOGIC;
|
|
data_input : IN STD_LOGIC;
|
|
data_out : OUT STD_LOGIC
|
|
);
|
|
END ENTITY sync;
|
|
|
|
To turn this off, add >
|
|
|
|
let g:vhdl_indent_genportmap = 0
|
|
|
|
to the vimrc file, which causes the previous alignment example to change: >
|
|
|
|
ENTITY sync IS
|
|
PORT (
|
|
clk : IN STD_LOGIC;
|
|
reset_n : IN STD_LOGIC;
|
|
data_input : IN STD_LOGIC;
|
|
data_out : OUT STD_LOGIC
|
|
);
|
|
END ENTITY sync;
|
|
|
|
|
|
Alignment of right-hand side assignment "<=" statements are performed by
|
|
default. This causes the following alignment example: >
|
|
|
|
sig_out <= (bus_a(1) AND
|
|
(sig_b OR sig_c)) OR
|
|
(bus_a(0) AND sig_d);
|
|
|
|
To turn this off, add >
|
|
|
|
let g:vhdl_indent_rhsassign = 0
|
|
|
|
to the vimrc file, which causes the previous alignment example to change: >
|
|
|
|
sig_out <= (bus_a(1) AND
|
|
(sig_b OR sig_c)) OR
|
|
(bus_a(0) AND sig_d);
|
|
|
|
|
|
Full-line comments (lines that begin with "--") are indented to be aligned with
|
|
the very previous line's comment, PROVIDED that a whitespace follows after
|
|
"--".
|
|
|
|
For example: >
|
|
|
|
sig_a <= sig_b; -- start of a comment
|
|
-- continuation of the comment
|
|
-- more of the same comment
|
|
|
|
While in Insert mode, after typing "-- " (note the space " "), hitting CTRL-F
|
|
will align the current "-- " with the previous line's "--".
|
|
|
|
If the very previous line does not contain "--", THEN the full-line comment
|
|
will be aligned with the start of the next non-blank line that is NOT a
|
|
full-line comment.
|
|
|
|
Indenting the following code: >
|
|
|
|
sig_c <= sig_d; -- comment 0
|
|
-- comment 1
|
|
-- comment 2
|
|
--debug_code:
|
|
--PROCESS(debug_in)
|
|
--BEGIN
|
|
-- FOR i IN 15 DOWNTO 0 LOOP
|
|
-- debug_out(8*i+7 DOWNTO 8*i) <= debug_in(15-i);
|
|
-- END LOOP;
|
|
--END PROCESS debug_code;
|
|
|
|
-- comment 3
|
|
sig_e <= sig_f; -- comment 4
|
|
-- comment 5
|
|
|
|
results in: >
|
|
|
|
sig_c <= sig_d; -- comment 0
|
|
-- comment 1
|
|
-- comment 2
|
|
--debug_code:
|
|
--PROCESS(debug_in)
|
|
--BEGIN
|
|
-- FOR i IN 15 DOWNTO 0 LOOP
|
|
-- debug_out(8*i+7 DOWNTO 8*i) <= debug_in(15-i);
|
|
-- END LOOP;
|
|
--END PROCESS debug_code;
|
|
|
|
-- comment 3
|
|
sig_e <= sig_f; -- comment 4
|
|
-- comment 5
|
|
|
|
Notice that "--debug_code:" does not align with "-- comment 2"
|
|
because there is no whitespace that follows after "--" in "--debug_code:".
|
|
|
|
Given the dynamic nature of indenting comments, indenting should be done TWICE.
|
|
On the first pass, code will be indented. On the second pass, full-line
|
|
comments will be indented according to the correctly indented code.
|
|
|
|
|
|
VIM *ft-vim-indent*
|
|
*g:vim_indent_cont*
|
|
For indenting Vim scripts there is one variable that specifies the amount of
|
|
indent for a continuation line, a line that starts with a backslash: >
|
|
|
|
:let g:vim_indent_cont = shiftwidth() * 3
|
|
|
|
Three times shiftwidth is the default value.
|
|
|
|
|
|
vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl:
|