closes: #17965 Signed-off-by: Damien Lejay <damien@lejay.be> Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
		
			
				
	
	
		
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			704 lines
		
	
	
		
			24 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| *develop.txt*   For Vim version 9.1.  Last change: 2025 Aug 11
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| 
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| 
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| 		  VIM REFERENCE MANUAL    by Bram Moolenaar
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| 
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| 
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| Development of Vim.					*development*
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| 
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| This text is important for those who want to be involved in further developing
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| Vim.
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| 
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| 1. Design goals		|design-goals|
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| 2. Design decisions	|design-decisions|
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| 3. Assumptions		|design-assumptions|
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| 4. Coding style		|coding-style|
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| 
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| See the file README.txt in the "src" directory for an overview of the source
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| code.
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| 
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| Vim is open source software.  Everybody is encouraged to contribute to help
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| improving Vim.  For sending patches a unified diff "diff -u" is preferred.
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| You can create a pull request on github, but it's not required.
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| Also see http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/How_to_make_and_submit_a_patch.
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| 
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| ==============================================================================
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| 1. Design goals						*design-goals*
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| 
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| Most important things come first (roughly).
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| 
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| Note that quite a few items are contradicting.  This is intentional.  A
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| balance must be found between them.
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| 
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| 
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| VIM IS... VI COMPATIBLE					*design-compatible*
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| 
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| First of all, it should be possible to use Vim as a drop-in replacement for
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| Vi.  When the user wants to, Vim can be used in compatible mode and hardly
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| any differences with the original Vi will be noticed.
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| 
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| Exceptions:
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| - We don't reproduce obvious Vi bugs in Vim.
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| - There are different versions of Vi.  I am using Version 3.7 (6/7/85) as a
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|   reference.  But support for other versions is also included when possible.
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|   The Vi part of POSIX is not considered a definitive source.
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| - Vim adds new commands, you cannot rely on some command to fail because it
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|   didn't exist in Vi.
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| - Vim will have a lot of features that Vi doesn't have.  Going back from Vim
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|   to Vi will be a problem, this cannot be avoided.
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| - Some things are hardly ever used (open mode, sending an e-mail when
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|   crashing, etc.).  Those will only be included when someone has a good reason
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|   why it should be included and it's not too much work.
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| - For some items it is debatable whether Vi compatibility should be
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|   maintained.  There will be an option flag for these.
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| 
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| 
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| VIM IS... IMPROVED					*design-improved*
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| 
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| The IMproved bits of Vim should make it a better Vi, without becoming a
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| completely different editor.  Extensions are done with a "Vi spirit".
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| - Use the keyboard as much as feasible.  The mouse requires a third hand,
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|   which we don't have.  Many terminals don't have a mouse.
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| - When the mouse is used anyway, avoid the need to switch back to the
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|   keyboard.  Avoid mixing mouse and keyboard handling.
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| - Add commands and options in a consistent way.  Otherwise people will have a
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|   hard time finding and remembering them.  Keep in mind that more commands and
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|   options will be added later.
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| - A feature that people do not know about is a useless feature.  Don't add
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|   obscure features, or at least add hints in documentation that they exist.
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| - Minimize using CTRL and other modifiers, they are more difficult to type.
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| - There are many first-time and inexperienced Vim users.  Make it easy for
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|   them to start using Vim and learn more over time.
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| - There is no limit to the features that can be added.  Selecting new features
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|   is one based on (1) what users ask for, (2) how much effort it takes to
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|   implement and (3) someone actually implementing it.
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| 
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| 
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| VIM IS... MULTI PLATFORM				*design-multi-platform*
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| 
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| Vim tries to help as many users on as many platforms as possible.
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| - Support many kinds of terminals.  The minimal demands are cursor positioning
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|   and clear-screen.  Commands should only use key strokes that most keyboards
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|   have.  Support all the keys on the keyboard for mapping.
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| - Support many platforms.  A condition is that there is someone willing to do
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|   Vim development on that platform, and it doesn't mean messing up the code.
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| - Support many compilers and libraries.  Not everybody is able or allowed to
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|   install another compiler or GUI library.
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| - People switch from one platform to another, and from GUI to terminal
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|   version.  Features should be present in all versions, or at least in as many
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|   as possible with a reasonable effort.  Try to avoid that users must switch
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|   between platforms to accomplish their work efficiently.
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| - That a feature is not possible on some platforms, or only possible on one
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|   platform, does not mean it cannot be implemented.  [This intentionally
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|   contradicts the previous item, these two must be balanced.]
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| 
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| 
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| VIM IS... WELL DOCUMENTED				*design-documented*
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| 
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| - A feature that isn't documented is a useless feature.  A patch for a new
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|   feature must include the documentation.
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| - Documentation should be comprehensive and understandable.  Using examples is
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|   recommended.
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| - Don't make the text unnecessarily long.  Less documentation means that an
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|   item is easier to find.
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| 
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| 
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| VIM IS... HIGH SPEED AND SMALL IN SIZE			*design-speed-size*
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| 
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| Using Vim must not be a big attack on system resources.  Keep it small and
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| fast.
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| - Computers are becoming faster and bigger each year.  Vim can grow too, but
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|   no faster than computers are growing.  Keep Vim usable on older systems.
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| - Many users start Vim from a shell very often.  Startup time must be short.
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| - Commands must work efficiently.  The time they consume must be as small as
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|   possible.  Useful commands may take longer.
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| - Don't forget that some people use Vim over a slow connection.  Minimize the
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|   communication overhead.
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| - Items that add considerably to the size and are not used by many people
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|   should be a feature that can be disabled.
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| - Vim is a component among other components.  Don't turn it into a massive
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|   application, but have it work well together with other programs.
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| 
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| 
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| VIM IS... MAINTAINABLE					*design-maintain*
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| 
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| - The source code should not become a mess.  It should be reliable code.
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| - Use the same layout in all files to make it easy to read |coding-style|.
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| - Use comments in a useful way!  Quoting the function name and argument names
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|   is NOT useful.  Do explain what they are for.
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| - Porting to another platform should be made easy, without having to change
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|   too much platform-independent code.
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| - Use the object-oriented spirit: Put data and code together.  Minimize the
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|   knowledge spread to other parts of the code.
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| 
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| 
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| VIM IS... FLEXIBLE					*design-flexible*
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| 
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| Vim should make it easy for users to work in their preferred styles rather
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| than coercing its users into particular patterns of work.  This can be for
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| items with a large impact (e.g., the 'compatible' option) or for details.  The
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| defaults are carefully chosen such that most users will enjoy using Vim as it
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| is.  Commands and options can be used to adjust Vim to the desire of the user
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| and its environment.
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| 
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| 
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| VIM IS... NOT						*design-not*
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| 
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| - Vim is not a shell or an Operating System.  It does provide a terminal
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|   window, in which you can run a shell or debugger.  E.g. to be able to do
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|   this over an ssh connection.  But if you don't need a text editor with that
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|   it is out of scope (use something like screen or tmux instead).
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|   A satirical way to say this: "Unlike Emacs, Vim does not attempt to include
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|   everything but the kitchen sink, but some people say that you can clean one
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|   with it.  ;-)"
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|   To use Vim with gdb see |terminal-debugger|.  Other (older) tools can be
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|   found at http://www.agide.org (link seems dead)  and http://clewn.sf.net.
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| - Vim is not a fancy GUI editor that tries to look nice at the cost of
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|   being less consistent over all platforms.  But functional GUI features are
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|   welcomed.
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| 
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| 
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| ==============================================================================
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| 2. Design decisions					*design-decisions*
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| 
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| Folding
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| 
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| Several forms of folding should be possible for the same buffer.  For example,
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| have one window that shows the text with function bodies folded, another
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| window that shows a function body.
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| 
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| Folding is a way to display the text.  It should not change the text itself.
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| Therefore the folding has been implemented as a filter between the text stored
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| in a buffer (buffer lines) and the text displayed in a window (logical lines).
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| 
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| 
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| Naming the window
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| 
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| The word "window" is commonly used for several things: A window on the screen,
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| the xterm window, a window inside Vim to view a buffer.
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| To avoid confusion, other items that are sometimes called window have been
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| given another name.  Here is an overview of the related items:
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| 
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| screen		The whole display.  For the GUI it's something like 1024x768
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| 		pixels.  The Vim shell can use the whole screen or part of it.
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| shell		The Vim application.  This can cover the whole screen (e.g.,
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| 		when running in a console) or part of it (xterm or GUI).
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| window		View on a buffer.  There can be several windows in Vim,
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| 		together with the command line, menubar, toolbar, etc. they
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| 		fit in the shell.
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| 
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| 
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| Spell checking						*develop-spell*
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| 
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| When spell checking was going to be added to Vim a survey was done over the
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| available spell checking libraries and programs.  Unfortunately, the result
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| was that none of them provided sufficient capabilities to be used as the spell
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| checking engine in Vim, for various reasons:
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| 
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| - Missing support for multibyte encodings.  At least UTF-8 must be supported,
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|   so that more than one language can be used in the same file.
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|   Doing on-the-fly conversion is not always possible (would require iconv
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|   support).
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| - For the programs and libraries: Using them as-is would require installing
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|   them separately from Vim.  That's mostly not impossible, but a drawback.
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| - Performance: A few tests showed that it's possible to check spelling on the
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|   fly (while redrawing), just like syntax highlighting.  But the mechanisms
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|   used by other code are much slower.  Myspell uses a hashtable, for example.
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|   The affix compression that most spell checkers use makes it slower too.
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| - For using an external program like aspell a communication mechanism would
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|   have to be setup.  That's complicated to do in a portable way (Unix-only
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|   would be relatively simple, but that's not good enough).  And performance
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|   will become a problem (lots of process switching involved).
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| - Missing support for words with non-word characters, such as "Etten-Leur" and
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|   "et al.", would require marking the pieces of them OK, lowering the
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|   reliability.
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| - Missing support for regions or dialects.  Makes it difficult to accept
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|   all English words and highlight non-Canadian words differently.
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| - Missing support for rare words.  Many words are correct but hardly ever used
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|   and could be a misspelled often-used word.
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| - For making suggestions the speed is less important and requiring to install
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|   another program or library would be acceptable.  But the word lists probably
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|   differ, the suggestions may be wrong words.
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| 
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| 
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| Spelling suggestions				*develop-spell-suggestions*
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| 
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| For making suggestions there are two basic mechanisms:
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| 1. Try changing the bad word a little bit and check for a match with a good
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|    word.  Or go through the list of good words, change them a little bit and
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|    check for a match with the bad word.  The changes are deleting a character,
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|    inserting a character, swapping two characters, etc.
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| 2. Perform soundfolding on both the bad word and the good words and then find
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|    matches, possibly with a few changes like with the first mechanism.
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| 
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| The first is good for finding typing mistakes.  After experimenting with
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| hashtables and looking at solutions from other spell checkers the conclusion
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| was that a trie (a kind of tree structure) is ideal for this.  Both for
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| reducing memory use and being able to try sensible changes.  For example, when
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| inserting a character only characters that lead to good words need to be
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| tried.  Other mechanisms (with hashtables) need to try all possible letters at
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| every position in the word.  Also, a hashtable has the requirement that word
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| boundaries are identified separately, while a trie does not require this.
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| That makes the mechanism a lot simpler.
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| 
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| Soundfolding is useful when someone knows how the words sounds but doesn't
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| know how it is spelled.  For example, the word "dictionary" might be written
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| as "daktonerie".  The number of changes that the first method would need to
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| try is very big, it's hard to find the good word that way.  After soundfolding
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| the words become "tktnr" and "tkxnry", these differ by only two letters.
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| 
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| To find words by their soundfolded equivalent (soundalike word) we need a list
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| of all soundfolded words.  A few experiments have been done to find out what
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| the best method is.  Alternatives:
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| 1. Do the sound folding on the fly when looking for suggestions.  This means
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|    walking through the trie of good words, soundfolding each word and
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|    checking how different it is from the bad word.  This is very efficient for
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|    memory use, but takes a long time.  On a fast PC it takes a couple of
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|    seconds for English, which can be acceptable for interactive use.  But for
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|    some languages it takes more than ten seconds (e.g., German, Catalan),
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|    which is unacceptably slow.  For batch processing (automatic corrections)
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|    it's too slow for all languages.
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| 2. Use a trie for the soundfolded words, so that searching can be done just
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|    like how it works without soundfolding.  This requires remembering a list
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|    of good words for each soundfolded word.  This makes finding matches very
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|    fast but requires quite a lot of memory, in the order of 1 to 10 Mbyte.
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|    For some languages more than the original word list.
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| 3. Like the second alternative, but reduce the amount of memory by using affix
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|    compression and store only the soundfolded basic word.  This is what Aspell
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|    does.  Disadvantage is that affixes need to be stripped from the bad word
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|    before soundfolding it, which means that mistakes at the start and/or end
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|    of the word will cause the mechanism to fail.  Also, this becomes slow when
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|    the bad word is quite different from the good word.
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| 
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| The choice made is to use the second mechanism and use a separate file.  This
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| way a user with sufficient memory can get very good suggestions while a user
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| who is short of memory or just wants the spell checking and no suggestions
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| doesn't use so much memory.
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| 
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| 
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| Word frequency
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| 
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| For sorting suggestions it helps to know which words are common.  In theory we
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| could store a word frequency with the word in the dictionary.  However, this
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| requires storing a count per word.  That degrades word tree compression a lot.
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| And maintaining the word frequency for all languages will be a heavy task.
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| Also, it would be nice to prefer words that are already in the text.  This way
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| the words that appear in the specific text are preferred for suggestions.
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| 
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| What has been implemented is to count words that have been seen during
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| displaying.  A hashtable is used to quickly find the word count.  The count is
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| initialized from words listed in COMMON items in the affix file, so that it
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| also works when starting a new file.
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| 
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| This isn't ideal, because the longer Vim is running the higher the counts
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| become.  But in practice it is a noticeable improvement over not using the
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| word count.
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| 
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| ==============================================================================
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| 3. Assumptions						*design-assumptions*
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| 
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| The following sections define the portability and compatibility constraints
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| that all Vim code and build tools must adhere to.
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| 
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| 
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| MAKEFILES					*assumptions-makefiles*
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| 						*POSIX.1-2001*
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| 
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| Vim's main Makefiles target maximum portability, relying solely on features
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| defined in POSIX.1-2001 `make` and ignoring later POSIX standards or GNU/BSD
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| extensions.  In practical terms, avoid:
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| 
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| 	- % pattern rules
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| 	- modern assignment (`:=`, `::=`) outside POSIX.1-2001
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| 	- special targets (`.ONESHELL`, `.NOTPARALLEL`, `.SILENT`, ...)
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| 	- order-only prerequisites (`|`) or automatic directory creation
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| 	- GNU/BSD conditionals (`ifdef`, `ifndef`, `.for`/`.endfor`, ...)
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| 
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| Since POSIX.1-2001 supports only traditional suffix rules, every object built
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| in a separate directory must have an explicit rule.  For example:
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| 
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| 	objects/evalbuffer.o: evalbuffer.c
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| 		$(CCC) -o $@ evalbuffer.c
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| 
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| This verbosity ensures that the same Makefile builds Vim unchanged with the
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| default `make` on Linux, *BSD, macOS, Solaris, AIX, HP-UX and virtually any
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| Unix-like OS.
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| 
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| Some platform-specific Makefiles (e.g., for Windows, NSIS, or Cygwin) may use
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| more advanced features when compatibility with basic make is not required.
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| 
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| 
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| C COMPILER					*assumptions-C-compiler*
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| 						*ANSI-C* *C89* *C90* *C95* *C99*
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| 
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| Vim strives for maximum portability (see |design-multi-platform|) and must
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| still build with Compaq C V6.4-005 on OpenVMS VAX V7.3.
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| 
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| Therefore, the latest ISO C standard we follow is:
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| 
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| 	`C95` (ISO/IEC 9899:1990/AMD1:1995)
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| 
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| In addition, the following `C99` features are explicitly allowed:
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| 	- `//` comments, as required by |style-comments|;
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| 	- Mixed declarations and statements in a block;
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| 	- Variadic macros `(..., __VA_ARGS__)`;
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| 	- Trailing comma in `enum` lists;
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| 	- `_Bool` type (for `bool`, `true` and `false`);
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| 	- `__func__` predefined identifier;
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| 	- `inline` functions (use `static inline` for portability);
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| 	- Compound literals `(type){ initializer-list }`;
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| 	- Logical source lines up to 4095 characters.
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| 
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| Platform-specific code may use any newer compiler features supported on that
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| platform.
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| 
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| 
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| SIZE OF VARIABLES				*assumptions-variables*
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| 
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| We follow POSIX.1-2001 (SUSv3) for type sizes, which in practice means:
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| 
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| 	char_u	    8-bit unsigned
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| 	int	    32-bit or larger signed
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| 	unsigned    32-bit or larger unsigned
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| 
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| 
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| ==============================================================================
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| 4. Coding style						*coding-style*
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| 
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| These are the rules to use when making changes to the Vim source code.  Please
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| stick to these rules, to keep the sources readable and maintainable.
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| 
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| This list is not complete.  Look in the source code for more examples.
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| 
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| The code repository contains an editorconfig file, that can be used together
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| with the distributed editorconfig plugin |editorconfig-install| to ensure the
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| recommended style is followed.
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| 
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| 
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| MAKING CHANGES						*style-changes*
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| 
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| The basic steps to make changes to the code:
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| 1. Get the code from github.  That makes it easier to keep your changed
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|    version in sync with the main code base (it may be a while before your
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|    changes will be included).
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| 2. Adjust the documentation.  Doing this first gives you an impression of how
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|    your changes affect the user.
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| 3. Make the source code changes.
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| 4. Check ../doc/todo.txt if the change affects any listed item.
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| 5. Add a test to src/testdir to verify the new behaviour and ensure it won't
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|    regress in the future.
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| 6. Make a patch with "git diff".
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| 7. Make a note about what changed, preferably mentioning the problem and the
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|    solution.  Send an email to the |vim-dev| maillist with an explanation and
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|    include the diff.
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| 
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| For any non-trivial change, please always create a pull request on github,
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| since this triggers the test suite.
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| 
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| 							*style-clang-format*
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| sound.c and sign.c can be (semi-) automatically formatted using the
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| `clang-format` formatter according to the distributed .clang-format file.
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| Other source files do not yet correspond to the .clang-format file.  This may
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| change in the future and they may be reformatted as well.
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| 
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| 
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| COMMENTS						*style-comments*
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| 
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| Try to avoid putting multiline comments inside a function body: if the
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| function is so complex that you need to separately comment parts of it, you
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| should probably rethink the structure of the function.
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| 
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| For file headers and function descriptions use: >
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|     /*
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|      * Description
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|      */
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| <
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| For everything else use: >
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|     // comment
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| <
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| 
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| INDENTATION						*style-indentation*
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| 
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| We use 4 space to indent the code. If you are using Vim to edit the source,
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| you don't need to do anything due to the |modeline|.
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| 
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| For other editors an `.editorconfig` is provided at the root of the repo.
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| 
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| For the source files `sign.c` and `sound.c` and any new file use only spaces,
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| no tabs. In addition, any new file must include a modeline with `set et` to
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| pass the indentation test.
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| 
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| 
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| DECLARATIONS						*style-declarations*
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| 
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| Declare, when possible, `for` loop variables in the guard:
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| OK: >
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|     for (int i = 0; i < len; ++i)
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| <
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| Wrong: >
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|     int i;
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|     for (i = 0; i < len; ++i)
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| <
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| Always declare a variable with a default value:
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| OK: >
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|     int n = 0;
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|     int *ptr = NULL;
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| <
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| Wrong: >
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|     int n;
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|     int *ptr;
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| <
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| 
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| BRACES							*style-braces*
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| 
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| All curly braces must be returned onto a new line:
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| OK: >
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|     if (cond)
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|     {
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
|     }
 | |
|     else
 | |
|     {
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
|     }
 | |
| <
 | |
| Wrong: >
 | |
|     if (cond) {
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
|     } else {
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
|     }
 | |
| <
 | |
| OK: >
 | |
|     while (cond)
 | |
|     {
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
|     }
 | |
| <
 | |
| Wrong: >
 | |
|     while (cond) {
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
|     }
 | |
| <
 | |
| OK: >
 | |
|     do
 | |
|     {
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
|     } while (cond);
 | |
| <
 | |
| or >
 | |
|     do
 | |
|     {
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
|     }
 | |
|     while (cond);
 | |
| <
 | |
| Wrong: >
 | |
|     do {
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
| 	cmd;
 | |
|     } while (cond);
 | |
| <
 | |
| 
 | |
| TYPES							    *style-types*
 | |
| 
 | |
| Use descriptive types. These are defined in src/vim.h, src/structs.h etc.
 | |
| Note that all custom types are postfixed with "_T"
 | |
| 
 | |
| Example: >
 | |
|     linenr_T
 | |
|     buf_T
 | |
|     pos_T
 | |
| <
 | |
| 
 | |
| SPACES AND PUNCTUATION					   *style-spaces*
 | |
| 
 | |
| No space between a function name and the bracket:
 | |
| 
 | |
| OK:	func(arg);
 | |
| Wrong:  func (arg);
 | |
| 
 | |
| Do use a space after `if`, `while`, `switch`, etc.
 | |
| 
 | |
| OK:	if (arg)	for (;;)
 | |
| Wrong:	if(arg)		for(;;)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Use a space after a comma or semicolon:
 | |
| 
 | |
| OK:	func(arg1, arg2);	for (i = 0; i < 2; ++i)
 | |
| Wrong:  func(arg1,arg2);	for (i = 0;i < 2;++i)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Use a space before and after '=', '+', '/', etc.
 | |
| 
 | |
| OK:	var = a * 5;
 | |
| Wrong:	var=a*5;
 | |
| 
 | |
| Use empty lines to group similar actions together.
 | |
| 
 | |
| OK: >
 | |
|     msg_puts_title(_("\n--- Signs ---"));
 | |
|     msg_putchar('\n');
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if (rbuf == NULL)
 | |
| 	buf = firstbuf;
 | |
|     else
 | |
| 	buf = rbuf;
 | |
| 
 | |
|     while (buf != NULL && !got_int)
 | |
| <
 | |
| Wrong: >
 | |
|     msg_puts_title(_("\n--- Signs ---"));
 | |
|     msg_putchar('\n');
 | |
|     if (rbuf == NULL)
 | |
| 	buf = firstbuf;
 | |
|     else
 | |
| 	buf = rbuf;
 | |
|     while (buf != NULL && !got_int)
 | |
| <
 | |
| 
 | |
| FUNCTIONS						*style-functions*
 | |
| 
 | |
| Use function declarations with the return type on a separate indented line.
 | |
| 
 | |
| OK: >
 | |
|     int
 | |
|     function_name(int arg1, int arg2)
 | |
|     {
 | |
|     }
 | |
| <
 | |
| Wrong: >
 | |
|     int function_name(int arg1, int arg2)
 | |
|     {
 | |
|     }
 | |
| <
 | |
| 
 | |
| Give meaningful names to function parameters.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| USE OF COMMON FUNCTIONS				 *style-common-functions*
 | |
| 
 | |
| Some functions that are common to use, have a special Vim version.  Always
 | |
| consider using the Vim version, because they were introduced with a reason.
 | |
| 
 | |
| NORMAL NAME	VIM NAME	DIFFERENCE OF VIM VERSION
 | |
| free()		vim_free()	Checks for freeing NULL
 | |
| malloc()	alloc()		Checks for out of memory situation
 | |
| malloc()	lalloc()	Like alloc(), but has long argument
 | |
| strcpy()	STRCPY()	Includes cast to (char *), for char_u * args
 | |
| strchr()	vim_strchr()	Accepts special characters
 | |
| strrchr()	vim_strrchr()	Accepts special characters
 | |
| isspace()	vim_isspace()	Can handle characters > 128
 | |
| iswhite()	vim_iswhite()	Only TRUE for tab and space
 | |
| memcpy()	mch_memmove()	Handles overlapped copies
 | |
| bcopy()		mch_memmove()	Handles overlapped copies
 | |
| memset()	vim_memset()	Uniform for all systems
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| NAMES							*style-names*
 | |
| 
 | |
| Function names can not be more than 31 characters long (because of VMS).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Don't use "delete" or "this" as a variable name, C++ doesn't like it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Because of the requirement that Vim runs on as many systems as possible, we
 | |
| need to avoid using names that are already defined by the system.  This is a
 | |
| list of names that are known to cause trouble.  The name is given as a regexp
 | |
| pattern.
 | |
| 
 | |
| is.*()		POSIX, ctype.h
 | |
| to.*()		POSIX, ctype.h
 | |
| 
 | |
| d_.*		POSIX, dirent.h
 | |
| l_.*		POSIX, fcntl.h
 | |
| gr_.*		POSIX, grp.h
 | |
| pw_.*		POSIX, pwd.h
 | |
| sa_.*		POSIX, signal.h
 | |
| mem.*		POSIX, string.h
 | |
| str.*		POSIX, string.h
 | |
| wcs.*		POSIX, string.h
 | |
| st_.*		POSIX, stat.h
 | |
| tms_.*		POSIX, times.h
 | |
| tm_.*		POSIX, time.h
 | |
| c_.*		POSIX, termios.h
 | |
| MAX.*		POSIX, limits.h
 | |
| __.*		POSIX, system
 | |
| _[A-Z].*	POSIX, system
 | |
| E[A-Z0-9]*	POSIX, errno.h
 | |
| 
 | |
| .*_t		POSIX, for typedefs.  Use .*_T instead.
 | |
| 
 | |
| wait		don't use as argument to a function, conflicts with types.h
 | |
| index		shadows global declaration
 | |
| time		shadows global declaration
 | |
| new		C++ reserved keyword
 | |
| 
 | |
| clear		Mac curses.h
 | |
| echo		Mac curses.h
 | |
| instr		Mac curses.h
 | |
| meta		Mac curses.h
 | |
| newwin		Mac curses.h
 | |
| nl		Mac curses.h
 | |
| overwrite	Mac curses.h
 | |
| refresh		Mac curses.h
 | |
| scroll		Mac curses.h
 | |
| typeahead	Mac curses.h
 | |
| 
 | |
| basename()	GNU string function
 | |
| dirname()	GNU string function
 | |
| get_env_value()	Linux system function
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| VARIOUS							*style-various*
 | |
| 
 | |
| Define'd names should be uppercase: >
 | |
|     #define SOME_THING
 | |
| <
 | |
| 
 | |
| Features always start with "FEAT_": >
 | |
|     #define FEAT_FOO
 | |
| <
 | |
| 
 | |
| Don't use '\"', some compilers can't handle it.  '"' works fine.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Don't use: >
 | |
|     #if HAVE_SOME
 | |
| <
 | |
| Some compilers can't handle that and complain that "HAVE_SOME" is not defined.
 | |
| Use >
 | |
|     #ifdef HAVE_SOME
 | |
| <
 | |
| or >
 | |
|     #if defined(HAVE_SOME)
 | |
| <
 | |
| 
 | |
| STYLE							*style-examples*
 | |
| 
 | |
| One statement per line.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Wrong:	    if (cond) a = 1;
 | |
| 
 | |
| OK:	    if (cond)
 | |
| 		a = 1;
 | |
| 
 | |
| Wrong:	    while (cond);
 | |
| 
 | |
| OK:	    while (cond)
 | |
| 		;
 | |
| 
 | |
| Wrong:	    do a = 1; while (cond);
 | |
| 
 | |
| OK:	    do
 | |
| 		a = 1;
 | |
| 	    while (cond);
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
|  vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl:
 |