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(Change <tt> to <code>, perhaps also minor tweak.)
m (Correct typo +path-extra => +path_extra)
Tag: Visual edit
 
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Here, the leading "./" tells Vim to use the directory of the current file rather than Vim's working directory.
 
Here, the leading "./" tells Vim to use the directory of the current file rather than Vim's working directory.
   
Regardless of the specific search used, you need the <code>+path-extra</code> feature for this tip.
+
Regardless of the specific search used, you need the <code>+path_extra</code> feature for this tip.
   
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 16:49, 27 May 2014

Tip 804 Printable Monobook Previous Next

created 2004 · complexity intermediate · author Dubhead · version 6.0


At the top of a source tree, create a tags file by

% ctags -R

This assumes Exuberant Ctags. The -R (or --recurse) option tells ctags to recurse into directories.

Then, set the tags option in vimrc as:

set tags=tags;

The last semicolon is the key here. When Vim tries to locate the 'tags' file, it first looks at the current directory, then the parent directory, then the parent of the parent, and so on. This setting works nicely with 'set autochdir', because then Vim's current directory is the same as the directory of the file. If you do not like using 'autochdir' but want the same upward search, use:

set tags=./tags;

Here, the leading "./" tells Vim to use the directory of the current file rather than Vim's working directory.

Regardless of the specific search used, you need the +path_extra feature for this tip.

References[]

Comments[]

You can also tag help/man files, and access it from Vim with commands like these in vimrc:

au FileType perl set tags^=$DOC/perl/tags
au FileType cpp set tags^=$DOC/cpp/tags