Maktaba is a vimscript plugin library. It is designed for plugin authors. Features include:
Maktaba advocates a plugin structure that, when adhered to, gives the plugin access to many powerful tools such as configuration flags. Within Google, these conventions standardize behavior across a wide variety of plugins.
Also contained are many utility functions that ease the pain of working with vimscript. This includes, among other things:
Maktaba plugins can be installed using any plugin manager. However, maktaba plugins make heavy use of dependency management, so it's recommended to use a plugin manager with dependency management capabilities, like VAM.
Installation of a few plugins using VAM looks something like
set runtimepath+=~/.vim/bundle/vim-addon-manager/
" Loads glaive, vtd, and their maktaba dependency.
call vam#ActivateAddons(['glaive', 'vtd'])
" Initializes all maktaba plugins.
call maktaba#plugin#Detect()
Several vim plugins are already using maktaba. As a user, you can generally expect these plugins to be configurable using Glaive and be more well-behaved in terms of things like defining unwanted global mappings and variables and avoiding annoying side-effects like moving your cursor.
Plugin authors should consider developing plugins using maktaba to simplify code, support modular plugins with hassle-free dependency management, and avoid common pitfalls. If you've written a plugin using maktaba, please add it to the list above and share feedback.
In the vroom/
directory you'll find literate test files that walk you through
maktaba features in depth. vroom/main.vroom
is a good place to start.
In the examples/
directory you can find an example maktaba plugin to give you
a feel for how maktaba plugins look.
In the doc/
directory you'll find helpfiles for maktaba. These are also
available via :help maktaba
if maktaba has been installed and helptags have
been generated. The help files document the maktaba API in its entirety.