cemerick / vim-fireplace

fireplace.vim: Clojure REPL tease, formerly foreplay.vim
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fireplace.vim

There's a REPL in fireplace, but you probably wouldn't have noticed if I hadn't told you. Such is the way with fireplace.vim. By the way, this plugin is for Clojure.

Fireplace.vim used to be called foreplay.vim, but it was renamed so Java developers wouldn't have to speak in hushed tones.

Installation

Fireplace.vim doesn't provide indenting or syntax highlighting, so you'll want a set of Clojure runtime files. You might also want classpath.vim to run code when no REPL is available.

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-fireplace.git
git clone git://github.com/tpope/vim-classpath.git
git clone git://github.com/guns/vim-clojure-static.git

Once help tags have been generated, you can view the manual with :help fireplace.

Features

This list isn't exhaustive; see the :help for details.

Transparent setup

Fireplace.vim talks to nREPL. With Leiningen, it connects automatically based on target/repl-port, otherwise it's just a :Connect away. You can connect to multiple instances of nREPL for different projects, and it will use the right one automatically.

The only external dependency is that you have either a Vim with Python support compiled in, or ruby in your path. (Don't ask.)

Oh, and if you don't have an nREPL connection, installing classpath.vim lets it fall back to using java clojure.main, using a class path based on your Leiningen or Maven config. It's a bit slow, but a two-second delay is vastly preferable to being forced out of my flow for a single command, in my book.

Not quite a REPL

You know that one plugin that provides a REPL in a split window and works absolutely flawlessly, never breaking just because you did something innocuous like backspace through part of the prompt? No? Such a shame, you really would have liked it.

I've taken a different approach in fireplace.vim. cq (Think "Clojure Quasi-REPL") is the prefix for a set of commands that bring up a command-line window — the same thing you get when you hit q: — but set up for Clojure code.

cqq prepopulates the command-line window with the expression under the cursor. cqc gives you a blank line in insert mode.

Evaluating from the buffer

Standard stuff here. :Eval evaluates a range (:%Eval gets the whole file), :Require requires a namespace with :reload (:Require! does :reload-all), either the current buffer or a given argument. There's a cp operator that evaluates a given motion (cpp for the expression under the cursor).

Any failed evaluation loads the stack trace into the location list, which can be easily accessed with :lopen.

Navigating and Comprehending

I'm new to Clojure, so stuff that helps me understand code is a top priority.

Where possible, I favor enhancing built-ins over inventing a bunch of <Leader> maps.

Omnicomplete

Because why not? It works in the quasi-REPL too.

FAQ

Why does it take so long for Vim to startup?

See the classpath.vim FAQ. You can uninstall classpath.vim if you only care about nREPL support.

Contributing

More than any other plugin, I'm in over my head here. I tried to do my homework, but you don't learn best practices overnight. Please, open GitHub issues for bug reports and feature requests. Even better than a feature request is just to tell me the pain you're experiencing, and perhaps some ideas for what might eliminate it. I know Vimscript; you know Clojure. Let's synergize.

I'm a stickler for commit messages, so if you send me a pull request with so much as superfluous period in the subject line, I will reject it, then TP your house.

Self-Promotion

Like fireplace.vim? Follow the repository on GitHub. And if you're feeling especially charitable, follow tpope on Twitter and GitHub.

License

Copyright © Tim Pope. Distributed under the same terms as Vim itself. See :help license.