Remember when everybody and their mother was using TextMate for Ruby on Rails development? Well if it wasn't for rails.vim, we'd still be in that era. So shut up and pay some respect. And check out these features:
-
Easy navigation of the Rails directory structure.
gf
considers context and knows about partials, fixtures, and much more. There are two commands,:A
(alternate) and:R
(related) for easy jumping between files, including favorites like model to schema, template to helper, and controller to functional test. For more advanced usage,:Rmodel
,:Rview
,:Rcontroller
, and several other commands are provided.:help rails-navigation
-
Enhanced syntax highlighting. From
has_and_belongs_to_many
todistance_of_time_in_words
, it's here. For easy completion of these long method names,'completefunc'
is set to enable syntax based completion on CTRL-X CTRL-U. -
Interface to rake. Use
:Rake
to run the current test, spec, or feature. Use:.Rake
to do a focused run of just the method, example, or scenario on the current line.:Rake
can also run arbitrary migrations, load individual fixtures, and more.:help rails-rake
-
Interface to the
rails
command. Generally, use:Rails console
to callrails console
orscript/console
. Most commands have wrappers with additional features::Rgenerate controller Blog
generates a blog controller and editsapp/controllers/blog_controller.rb
.:help rails-scripts
-
Partial and concern extraction. In a view,
:Rextract {file}
replaces the desired range (typically selected in visual line mode) withrender '{file}'
, which is automatically created with your content. In a model or controller, a concern is created, with the appropriateinclude
declaration left behind.:help rails-:Rextract
-
Integration with other plugins. If dbext.vim is installed, it will be transparently configured to reflect
database.yml
. Users of abolish.vim get pluralize and tableize coercions, and users of bundler.vim get a smattering of features.:help rails-integration
If you don't have a preferred installation method, I recommend installing pathogen.vim, and then simply copy and paste:
cd ~/.vim/bundle
git clone git://github.com/tpope/vim-rails.git
git clone git://github.com/tpope/vim-bundler.git
You don't strictly need bundler.vim, but it helps.
Once help tags have been generated, you can view the manual with
:help rails
.
I installed the plugin and started Vim. Why does only the
:Rails
command exist?
This plugin cares about the current file, not the current working directory. Edit a file from a Rails application.
I opened a new tab. Why does only the
:Rails
command exist?
This plugin cares about the current file, not the current working
directory. Edit a file from a Rails application. You can use the :RT
family of commands to open a new tab and edit a file at the same time.
Can I use rails.vim to edit Rails engines?
It's not supported, but if you touch config/environment.rb
in the root
of the engine, things should mostly work.
Can I use rails.vim to edit other Ruby projects?
I wrote rake.vim for exactly that
purpose. It activates for any project with a Rakefile
that's not a
Rails application.
What Rails versions are supported?
All of them. A few features like syntax highlighting tend to reflect the latest version only.
Rake is slow. How about making
:Rake
runtestrb
/rspec
/cucumber
directly instead ofrake
?
Well then it wouldn't make sense to call it :Rake
, now, would it?
Maybe one day I'll add a separate :Run
command or something. In the
meantime, here's how you can set up :make
to run the current test:
autocmd FileType cucumber compiler cucumber | setl makeprg=cucumber\ \"%:p\"
autocmd FileType ruby
\ if expand('%') =~# '_test\.rb$' |
\ compiler rubyunit | setl makeprg=testrb\ \"%:p\" |
\ elseif expand('%') =~# '_spec\.rb$' |
\ compiler rspec | setl makeprg=rspec\ \"%:p\" |
\ else |
\ compiler ruby | setl makeprg=ruby\ -wc\ \"%:p\" |
\ endif
autocmd User Bundler
\ if &makeprg !~# 'bundle' | setl makeprg^=bundle\ exec\ | endif
Like rails.vim? Follow the repository on GitHub and vote for it on vim.org. And if you're feeling especially charitable, follow tpope on Twitter and GitHub.
Copyright (c) Tim Pope. Distributed under the same terms as Vim itself.
See :help license
.