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Ch19. Compile
Compiling is an important subject for many languages. In this chapter, you will learn how to compile from Vim. In addition, you will look at ways to take advantage of Vim's :make
command.
Compile From the Command Line
You can use the bang operator (!
) to compile. If you need to compile your .cpp
file with g++
, run:
:!g++ hello.cpp -o hello
However, having to manually type the filename and the output filename each time is error-prone and tedious. A makefile is the way to go.
Makefile
In this section, I will briefly go over makefile basics. If you already know how to use a makefile, feel free to jump to the next section. In the current directory, create a file named makefile
. Put this inside:
all:
echo "Hello all"
Run the make
command from the terminal:
make
You will see:
echo "Hello all"
Hello all
The terminal outputs the echo command itself and its output. You can have multiple "targets" in a makefile. Let's add a few:
all:
echo "Hello all"
foo:
echo "Hello foo"
list_pls:
ls
Now you can run the make
command with different targets:
make foo
## returns "Hello foo"
make list_pls
## returns the ls command
The make
command outputs the actual command in addition to the output. To suppress the output of the actual command, append @
before that command, for example:
all:
@echo "Hello all"
Now when you run make
, you only see "Hello all" and not echo "Hello all"
.
:make
Vim has a :make
command to run a makefile. When you run it, Vim looks for a makefile in the current directory to execute.
If you haven't already, create a file named makefile
in the current directory and put these inside:
all:
echo "Hello all"
foo:
echo "Hello foo"
list_pls:
ls
Run this from Vim:
:make
Vim executes it the same way as when you're running it from the terminal. The :make
command accepts parameter just like the terminal make
command. Run:
:make foo
:make list_pls
The :make
command uses Vim's quickfix
to store any error if you run a bad command. Let's run a nonexisting target:
:make dontexist
You should see an error running that command. To view that error, run the quickfix
command :copen
to view the quickfix
window:
|| make: *** No rule to make target `dontexist'. Stop.
Compile With make
Let's use the makefile to compile a basic .cpp
program. First, let's create a hello.cpp
file:
#include <iostream>
int main() {
std::cout << "Hello!\\n";
return 0;
}
Update your makefile
to build and run a .cpp
file:
all:
echo "build, run"
build:
g++ hello.cpp -o hello
run:
./hello
Now run:
:make build
The g++
compiles ./hello.cpp
and creates ./hello
. Then run:
:make run
You should see "Hello!"
printed on the terminal.
makeprg
When you run :make
, Vim actually runs whatever command that is set under the makeprg
option. If you run :set makeprg?
, you'll see:
makeprg=make
The default :make
command is the make
external command. To change the :make
command to execute g++ <your-file-name>
each time you run it, run:
:set makeprg=g++\\ %
The \\
is to escape the space after g++
(you need to escape the escape). The %
symbol in Vim represents the current file. The command g++\\ %
is equivalent to running g++ hello.cpp
.
Go to ./hello.cpp
then run :make
. Vim compiles hello.cpp
and creates a.out
because you didn't specify the output. Let's refactor it so it will name the compiled output with the name of the original file minus the extension. Run:
:set makeprg=g++\\ %\\ -o\\ %<
The breakdown:
g++\\ %
is the same as above. It is equivalent to runningg++ <your-file>
.-o
is the output option.%<
in Vim represents the current file name without an extension (hello.cpp
becomeshello
).
When you run :make
from inside ./hello.cpp
, it is compiled into ./hello
. To quickly execute ./hello
from inside ./hello.cpp
, run :!./%<
. Again, this is the same as running :!./<current-file-name-minus-the-extension>
.
For more, check out :h :compiler
and :h write-compiler-plugin
.
Auto-Compile On Save
You can further make life easier by automating compilation. Recall that you can use Vim's autocommand
to automate actions based on certain events. To automatically compile .cpp
files on each save:
:autocmd BufWritePost *.cpp make
Each time you save inside a .cpp
file, Vim executes the make
command.
Switching Compiler
Vim has a :compiler
command to quickly switch compilers. Your Vim build probably comes with several pre-built compiler configurations. To check what compilers you have, run:
:e $VIMRUNTIME/compilers/<tab>
You should see a list of compilers for different programming languages.
To use the :compiler
command, suppose you have a ruby file, hello.rb
, and inside it has:
puts "Hello ruby"
Recall that if you run :make
, Vim executes whatever command is assigned to makeprg
(default is make
). If you run:
:compiler ruby
Vim runs the $VIMRUNTIME/compiler/ruby.vim
script and changes the makeprg
to use the ruby
command. Now if you run :set makeprg?
, it should say makeprg=ruby
(this depends on what is inside your $VIMRUNTIME/compiler/ruby.vim
file or if you have another custom ruby compilers. Yours might be different). The :compiler <your-lang>
command allows you to switch to different compilers quickly. This is useful if your project uses multiple languages.
You don't have to use the :compiler
and makeprg
to compile a program. You can run a test script, lint a file, send a signal, or anything you want.
Creating A Custom Compiler
Let's create a simple Typescript compiler. Install Typescript (npm install -g typescript
) to your machine. You should now have the tsc
command. If you haven't played with typescript before, tsc
compiles a Typescript file into a Javascript file. Suppose that you have a file, hello.ts
:
const hello = "hello";
console.log(hello);
If you run tsc hello.ts
, it will compile into hello.js
. However, if you have the following expressions inside hello.ts
:
const hello = "hello";
hello = "hello again";
console.log(hello);
This will throw an error because you can't mutate a const
variable. Running tsc hello.ts
will throw an error:
hello.ts:2:1 - error TS2588: Cannot assign to 'person' because it is a constant.
2 person = "hello again";
~~~~~~
Found 1 error.
To create a simple Typescript compiler, in your ~/.vim/
directory, add a compiler
directory (~/.vim/compiler/
), then create a typescript.vim
file (~/.vim/compiler/typescript.vim
). Put this inside:
CompilerSet makeprg=tsc
CompilerSet errorformat=%f:\ %m
The first line sets the makeprg
to run the tsc
command. The second line sets the error format to display the file (%f
), followed by a literal colon (:
) and an escaped space (\
), followed by the error message (%m
). To learn more about the error formatting, check out :h errorformat
.
You should also read some of the pre-made compilers to see how others do it. Check out :e $VIMRUNTIME/compiler/<some-language>.vim
.
Because some plugins may interfere with the Typescript file, let's open the hello.ts
without any plugin, using the --noplugin
flag:
vim --noplugin hello.ts
Check the makeprg
:
:set makeprg?
It should say the default make
program. To use the new Typescript compiler, run:
:compiler typescript
When you run :set makeprg?
, it should say tsc
now. Let's put it to the test. Run:
:make %
Recall that %
means the current file. Watch your Typescript compiler work as expected! To see the list of error(s), run :copen
.
Async Compiler
Sometimes compiling can take a long time. You don't want to be staring at a frozen Vim while waiting for your compilation process to finish. Wouldn't it be nice if you can compile asynchronously so you can still use Vim during compilation?
Luckily there are plugins to run async processes. The two big ones are:
In this chapter, I will go over vim-dispatch, but I would strongly encourage you to try all of them out there.
Vim and NeoVim actually supports async jobs, but they are beyond the scope of this chapter. If you're curious, check out :h job-channel-overview.txt
.
Plugin: Vim-dispatch
Vim-dispatch has several commands, but the two main ones are :Make
and :Dispatch
commands.
:Make
Vim-dispatch's :Make
command is similar to Vim's :make
, but it runs asynchronously. If you are in a Javascript project and you need to run npm t
, you might attempt to set your makeprg to be:
:set makeprg=npm\\ t
If you run:
:make
Vim will execute npm t
. Meanwhile, you are just staring at the frozen screen while your Javascript test runs. With vim-dispatch, you can just run:
:Make
Vim will run npm t
asynchronously. This way, while npm t
is running on a background process, you can edit your text with Vim. Neat!
:Dispatch
The :Dispatch
command works like the :compiler
and the :!
command.
Assume that you are inside a ruby spec file and you need to run a test. Run:
:Dispatch rspec %
Vim will asynchronously run the rspec
command against the current file (%
).
Automating Dispatch
Vim-dispatch has b:dispatch
buffer variable that you can configure to evaluate specific command. You can leverage it with autocmd
. If you add this in your vimrc:
autocmd BufEnter *_spec.rb let b:dispatch = 'bundle exec rspec %'
Now each time you enter a file (BufEnter
) that ends with _spec.rb
, running :Dispatch
automatically executes bundle exec rspec <your-current-ruby-spec-file>
.
Learn Compile The Smart Way
In this chapter, you learned that you can use the make
and compiler
commands to run any process from inside Vim asynchronously to complement your programming workflow. Vim's ability to extend itself with other programs makes it powerful.