The Vim plug-in luainspect.vim
uses the LuaInspect tool to (automatically) perform semantic highlighting of variables in Lua source code. It was inspired by lua2-mode (for Emacs) and the SciTE plug-in included with LuaInspect. In addition to the semantic highlighting the following features are currently supported:
Press <F2>
with the text cursor on a variable and the plug-in will prompt you to rename the variable.
Press gd
(in normal mode) with the text cursor on a variable and you’ll jump to its declaration / first occurrence.
When you hover over a variable with the mouse cursor in graphical Vim, information about the variable is displayed in a tooltip.
If the text cursor is on a variable while the highlighting is refreshed then all occurrences of the variable will be marked in the style of Vim’s cursorline option.
When luainspect reports a wrong argument count for a function call the text will be highlighted with a green underline. When you hover over the highlighted text a tooltip shows the associated warning message.
When LuaInspect reports warnings about unused variables, wrong argument counts, etc. they are shown in a location list window.
When a syntax error is found (during highlighting or using the rename functionality) the lines where the error is reported will be marked like a spelling error.
Please note that the vim-lua-inspect plug-in requires my vim-misc plug-in which is separately distributed.
Unzip the most recent ZIP archives of the vim-lua-inspect and vim-misc plug-ins inside your Vim profile directory (usually this is ~/.vim
on UNIX and %USERPROFILE%\vimfiles
on Windows), restart Vim and execute the command :helptags ~/.vim/doc
(use :helptags ~\vimfiles\doc
instead on Windows).
If you prefer you can also use Pathogen, Vundle or a similar tool to install & update the vim-lua-inspect and vim-misc plug-ins using a local clone of the git repository.
Now try it out: Edit a Lua file and within a few seconds semantic highlighting should be enabled automatically!
Note that on Windows a command prompt window pops up whenever LuaInspect is run as an external process. If this bothers you then you can install my shell.vim plug-in which includes a DLL that works around this issue. Once you’ve installed both plug-ins it should work out of the box!
When you open any Lua file the semantic highlighting should be enabled automatically within a few seconds, so you don’t have to configure anything if you’re happy with the defaults.
:LuaInspect
command
You don’t need to use this command unless you’ve disabled automatic highlighting using g:lua_inspect_events
. When you execute this command the plug-in runs the LuaInspect tool and then highlights all variables in the current buffer using one of the following highlighting groups:
If you don’t like one or more of the default styles the Vim documentation describes how to change them. If you want to disable the semantic highlighting in a specific Vim buffer execute :LuaInspect!
in that buffer. When you want to re-enable the highlighting execute :LuaInspect
again, but now without the bang (!).
:LuaInspectToggle
command
By default the semantic highlighting and the warning messages in the location list window are automatically applied to Lua buffers and updated every once in a while, but this can be disabled by setting g:lua_inspect_events
to an empty string in your vimrc script. If the plug-in is not automatically enabled then it may be useful to enable/disable it using a key mapping. That’s what the :LuaInspectToggle
command is for. You still have to define your key mapping of choice in your vimrc script though. For example:
" Don't enable the lua-inspect plug-in automatically in Lua buffers. let g:lua_inspect_events = '' " Enable/disable the lua-inspect plug-in manually using <F6>. imap <F6> <C-o>:LuaInspectToggle<CR> nmap <F6> :LuaInspectToggle<CR>
:LuaInspectRename
command
This command renames the variable under the cursor. It’s used to define the <F2>
mapping and can be used if you don’t like the default mappings and want to define your own.
:LuaInspectGoTo
command
This command jumps to the definition of the variable under the cursor. It’s used to define the gd
mapping and can be used if you don’t like the default mappings and want to define your own.
g:loaded_luainspect
option
This variable isn’t really an option but if you want to avoid loading the luainspect.vim
plug-in you can set this variable to any value in your vimrc script:
:let g:loaded_luainspect = 1
g:lua_inspect_mappings
option
If this is set to true (1, the default value) then the <F2>
and gd
mappings are defined in Lua buffers (as buffer local mappings). You can set it to false (0) to disable the default mappings (so you can define your own).
g:lua_inspect_warnings
option
When LuaInspect reports warnings about unused variables, wrong argument counts, etc. they are automatically shown in a location list window. If you don’t like this add the following to your vimrc script:
:let g:lua_inspect_warnings = 0
g:lua_inspect_events
option
By default semantic highlighting is automatically enabled after a short timeout and when you save a buffer. If you want to disable automatic highlighting altogether add the following to your vimrc script:
:let g:lua_inspect_events = ''
You can also add events, for example if you also want to run :LuaInspect
the moment you edit a Lua file then try this:
:let g:lua_inspect_events = 'CursorHold,CursorHoldI,BufReadPost,BufWritePost'
Note that this only works when the plug-in is loaded (or reloaded) after setting the g:lua_inspect_events
option.
g:lua_inspect_internal
option
The plug-in uses the Lua interface for Vim when available so that it doesn’t have to run LuaInspect as an external program (which can slow things down). If you insist on running LuaInspect as an external program you can set this variable to false (0) in your vimrc script:
:let g:lua_inspect_internal = 0
If you have questions, bug reports, suggestions, etc. the author can be contacted at peter@peterodding.com. The latest version is available at http://peterodding.com/code/vim/lua-inspect/ and http://github.com/xolox/vim-lua-inspect. If you like this plug-in please vote for it on Vim Online.
This software is licensed under the MIT license. © 2014 Peter Odding <peter@peterodding.com>.
The source code repository and distributions contain bundled copies of LuaInspect and Metalua, please refer to their licenses (also included).
Last updated Tue Jun 17 20:08:43 UTC 2014.