@ -251,7 +251,7 @@ Vim has an environment variable `$VIMRUNTIME` for default scripts and support fi
The structure should look familiar. It contains many runtime paths you learned in this chapter.
Recall in Chapter 21, you learned that when you open Vim, it looks for a vimrc files in seven different locations. I said that the last location Vim checks is `$VIMRUNTIME/default.vim`. If Vim fails to find any uservimrc files, Vim uses a `default.vim` as vimrc.
Recall in Chapter 21, you learned that when you open Vim, it looks for a vimrc files in seven different locations. I said that the last location Vim checks is `$VIMRUNTIME/defaults.vim`. If Vim fails to find any uservimrc files, Vim uses a `defaults.vim` as vimrc.
Have you ever tried running Vim without syntax plugin like vim-polyglot and yet your file is still syntatically highlighted? That is because when Vim fails to find a syntax file from the runtime path, Vim looks for a syntax file from `$VIMRUNTIME` syntax directory.