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Diffstat (limited to '.vim/plugin/cscope_maps.vim')
-rw-r--r-- | .vim/plugin/cscope_maps.vim | 166 |
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diff --git a/.vim/plugin/cscope_maps.vim b/.vim/plugin/cscope_maps.vim deleted file mode 100644 index c46c704..0000000 --- a/.vim/plugin/cscope_maps.vim +++ /dev/null @@ -1,166 +0,0 @@ -"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" -" CSCOPE settings for vim -"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" -" -" This file contains some boilerplate settings for vim's cscope interface, -" plus some keyboard mappings that I've found useful. -" -" USAGE: -" -- vim 6: Stick this file in your ~/.vim/plugin directory (or in a -" 'plugin' directory in some other directory that is in your -" 'runtimepath'. -" -" -- vim 5: Stick this file somewhere and 'source cscope.vim' it from -" your ~/.vimrc file (or cut and paste it into your .vimrc). -" -" NOTE: -" These key maps use multiple keystrokes (2 or 3 keys). If you find that vim -" keeps timing you out before you can complete them, try changing your timeout -" settings, as explained below. -" -" Happy cscoping, -" -" Jason Duell jduell@alumni.princeton.edu 2002/3/7 -"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" - - -" This tests to see if vim was configured with the '--enable-cscope' option -" when it was compiled. If it wasn't, time to recompile vim... -if has("cscope") - - """"""""""""" Standard cscope/vim boilerplate - - " use both cscope and ctag for 'ctrl-]', ':ta', and 'vim -t' - set cscopetag - - " check cscope for definition of a symbol before checking ctags: set to 1 - " if you want the reverse search order. - set csto=0 - - " add any cscope database in current directory - if filereadable("cscope.out") - cs add cscope.out - " else add the database pointed to by environment variable - elseif $CSCOPE_DB != "" - cs add $CSCOPE_DB - endif - - " show msg when any other cscope db added - set cscopeverbose - - - """"""""""""" My cscope/vim key mappings - " - " The following maps all invoke one of the following cscope search types: - " - " 's' symbol: find all references to the token under cursor - " 'g' global: find global definition(s) of the token under cursor - " 'c' calls: find all calls to the function name under cursor - " 't' text: find all instances of the text under cursor - " 'e' egrep: egrep search for the word under cursor - " 'f' file: open the filename under cursor - " 'i' includes: find files that include the filename under cursor - " 'd' called: find functions that function under cursor calls - " - " Below are three sets of the maps: one set that just jumps to your - " search result, one that splits the existing vim window horizontally and - " diplays your search result in the new window, and one that does the same - " thing, but does a vertical split instead (vim 6 only). - " - " I've used CTRL-\ and CTRL-@ as the starting keys for these maps, as it's - " unlikely that you need their default mappings (CTRL-\'s default use is - " as part of CTRL-\ CTRL-N typemap, which basically just does the same - " thing as hitting 'escape': CTRL-@ doesn't seem to have any default use). - " If you don't like using 'CTRL-@' or CTRL-\, , you can change some or all - " of these maps to use other keys. One likely candidate is 'CTRL-_' - " (which also maps to CTRL-/, which is easier to type). By default it is - " used to switch between Hebrew and English keyboard mode. - " - " All of the maps involving the <cfile> macro use '^<cfile>$': this is so - " that searches over '#include <time.h>" return only references to - " 'time.h', and not 'sys/time.h', etc. (by default cscope will return all - " files that contain 'time.h' as part of their name). - - - " To do the first type of search, hit 'CTRL-\', followed by one of the - " cscope search types above (s,g,c,t,e,f,i,d). The result of your cscope - " search will be displayed in the current window. You can use CTRL-T to - " go back to where you were before the search. - " - - " Replaced C-\ by C-t -- tklauser 20090221 - nmap <C-t>s :cs find s <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-t>g :cs find g <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-t>c :cs find c <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-t>t :cs find t <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-t>e :cs find e <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-t>f :cs find f <C-R>=expand("<cfile>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-t>i :cs find i ^<C-R>=expand("<cfile>")<CR>$<CR> - nmap <C-t>d :cs find d <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - - - " Using 'CTRL-spacebar' (intepreted as CTRL-@ by vim) then a search type - " makes the vim window split horizontally, with search result displayed in - " the new window. - " - " (Note: earlier versions of vim may not have the :scs command, but it - " can be simulated roughly via: - " nmap <C-@>s <C-W><C-S> :cs find s <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - - nmap <C-@>s :scs find s <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-@>g :scs find g <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-@>c :scs find c <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-@>t :scs find t <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-@>e :scs find e <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-@>f :scs find f <C-R>=expand("<cfile>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-@>i :scs find i ^<C-R>=expand("<cfile>")<CR>$<CR> - nmap <C-@>d :scs find d <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - - - " Hitting CTRL-space *twice* before the search type does a vertical - " split instead of a horizontal one (vim 6 and up only) - " - " (Note: you may wish to put a 'set splitright' in your .vimrc - " if you prefer the new window on the right instead of the left - - nmap <C-@><C-@>s :vert scs find s <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-@><C-@>g :vert scs find g <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-@><C-@>c :vert scs find c <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-@><C-@>t :vert scs find t <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-@><C-@>e :vert scs find e <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-@><C-@>f :vert scs find f <C-R>=expand("<cfile>")<CR><CR> - nmap <C-@><C-@>i :vert scs find i ^<C-R>=expand("<cfile>")<CR>$<CR> - nmap <C-@><C-@>d :vert scs find d <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> - - - """"""""""""" key map timeouts - " - " By default Vim will only wait 1 second for each keystroke in a mapping. - " You may find that too short with the above typemaps. If so, you should - " either turn off mapping timeouts via 'notimeout'. - " - "set notimeout - " - " Or, you can keep timeouts, by uncommenting the timeoutlen line below, - " with your own personal favorite value (in milliseconds): - " - "set timeoutlen=4000 - " - " Either way, since mapping timeout settings by default also set the - " timeouts for multicharacter 'keys codes' (like <F1>), you should also - " set ttimeout and ttimeoutlen: otherwise, you will experience strange - " delays as vim waits for a keystroke after you hit ESC (it will be - " waiting to see if the ESC is actually part of a key code like <F1>). - " - "set ttimeout - " - " personally, I find a tenth of a second to work well for key code - " timeouts. If you experience problems and have a slow terminal or network - " connection, set it higher. If you don't set ttimeoutlen, the value for - " timeoutlent (default: 1000 = 1 second, which is sluggish) is used. - " - "set ttimeoutlen=100 - -endif - - |