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diff --git a/vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe/doc/youcompleteme.txt b/vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe/doc/youcompleteme.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4a7bfd7 --- /dev/null +++ b/vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe/doc/youcompleteme.txt @@ -0,0 +1,3209 @@ +*youcompleteme* YouCompleteMe: a code-completion engine for Vim + +=============================================================================== +Contents ~ + + 1. Introduction |youcompleteme-introduction| + 2. Intro |youcompleteme-intro| + 3. Installation |youcompleteme-installation| + 1. Mac OS X |youcompleteme-mac-os-x| + 2. Ubuntu Linux x64 |youcompleteme-ubuntu-linux-x64| + 3. Fedora Linux x64 |youcompleteme-fedora-linux-x64| + 4. Windows |youcompleteme-windows| + 5. FreeBSD/OpenBSD |youcompleteme-freebsd-openbsd| + 6. Full Installation Guide |youcompleteme-full-installation-guide| + 4. Quick Feature Summary |youcompleteme-quick-feature-summary| + 1. General (all languages) |youcompleteme-general| + 2. C-family languages (C, C++, Objective C, Objective C++) |youcompleteme-c-family-languages| + 3. C♯ |youcompleteme-c| + 4. Python |youcompleteme-python| + 5. Go |youcompleteme-go| + 6. TypeScript |youcompleteme-typescript| + 7. JavaScript |youcompleteme-javascript| + 8. Rust |youcompleteme-rust| + 5. User Guide |youcompleteme-user-guide| + 1. General Usage |youcompleteme-general-usage| + 2. Client-Server Architecture |youcompleteme-client-server-architecture| + 3. Completion String Ranking |youcompleteme-completion-string-ranking| + 4. General Semantic Completion |youcompleteme-general-semantic-completion| + 5. C-family Semantic Completion |youcompleteme-c-family-semantic-completion| + 6. JavaScript Semantic Completion |youcompleteme-javascript-semantic-completion| + 1. Quick start |youcompleteme-quick-start| + 2. Explanation |youcompleteme-explanation| + 3. Tips and tricks |youcompleteme-tips-tricks| + 1. Configuring Tern for node support |youcompleteme-configuring-tern-for-node-support| + 2. Configuring Tern for requirejs support |youcompleteme-configuring-tern-for-requirejs-support| + 7. Rust Semantic Completion |youcompleteme-rust-semantic-completion| + 8. Python Semantic Completion |youcompleteme-python-semantic-completion| + 9. Semantic Completion for Other Languages |youcompleteme-semantic-completion-for-other-languages| + 10. Writing New Semantic Completers |youcompleteme-writing-new-semantic-completers| + 11. Diagnostic Display |youcompleteme-diagnostic-display| + 1. Diagnostic Highlighting Groups |youcompleteme-diagnostic-highlighting-groups| + 6. Commands |youcompleteme-commands| + 1. The |:YcmRestartServer| command + 2. The |:YcmForceCompileAndDiagnostics| command + 3. The |:YcmDiags| command + 4. The |:YcmShowDetailedDiagnostic| command + 5. The |:YcmDebugInfo| command + 6. The |:YcmToggleLogs| command + 7. The |:YcmCompleter| command + 7. YcmCompleter Subcommands |youcompleteme-ycmcompleter-subcommands| + 1. GoTo Commands |youcompleteme-goto-commands| + 1. The |GoToInclude| subcommand + 2. The |GoToDeclaration| subcommand + 3. The |GoToDefinition| subcommand + 4. The |GoTo| subcommand + 5. The |GoToImprecise| subcommand + 6. The |GoToReferences| subcommand + 7. The |GoToImplementation| subcommand + 8. The |GoToImplementationElseDeclaration| subcommand + 2. Semantic Information Commands |youcompleteme-semantic-information-commands| + 1. The |GetType| subcommand + 2. The |GetParent| subcommand + 3. The |GetDoc| subcommand + 3. Refactoring and FixIt Commands |youcompleteme-refactoring-fixit-commands| + 1. The |FixIt| subcommand + 2. The 'RefactorRename <new name>' subcommand |RefactorRename-new-name| + 3. Multi-file Refactor |youcompleteme-multi-file-refactor| + 4. Miscellaneous Commands |youcompleteme-miscellaneous-commands| + 1. The |ClearCompilationFlagCache| subcommand + 2. The |StartServer| subcommand + 3. The |StopServer| subcommand + 4. The |RestartServer| subcommand + 5. The |ReloadSolution| subcommand + 8. Functions |youcompleteme-functions| + 1. The |youcompleteme#GetErrorCount| function + 2. The |youcompleteme#GetWarningCount| function + 9. Autocommands |youcompleteme-autocommands| + 1. The |YcmQuickFixOpened| autocommand + 10. Options |youcompleteme-options| + 1. The |g:ycm_min_num_of_chars_for_completion| option + 2. The |g:ycm_min_num_identifier_candidate_chars| option + 3. The |g:ycm_auto_trigger| option + 4. The |g:ycm_filetype_whitelist| option + 5. The |g:ycm_filetype_blacklist| option + 6. The |g:ycm_filetype_specific_completion_to_disable| option + 7. The |g:ycm_show_diagnostics_ui| option + 8. The |g:ycm_error_symbol| option + 9. The |g:ycm_warning_symbol| option + 10. The |g:ycm_enable_diagnostic_signs| option + 11. The |g:ycm_enable_diagnostic_highlighting| option + 12. The |g:ycm_echo_current_diagnostic| option + 13. The |g:ycm_always_populate_location_list| option + 14. The |g:ycm_open_loclist_on_ycm_diags| option + 15. The |g:ycm_allow_changing_updatetime| option + 16. The |g:ycm_complete_in_comments| option + 17. The |g:ycm_complete_in_strings| option + 18. The |g:ycm_collect_identifiers_from_comments_and_strings| option + 19. The |g:ycm_collect_identifiers_from_tags_files| option + 20. The |g:ycm_seed_identifiers_with_syntax| option + 21. The |g:ycm_extra_conf_vim_data| option + 22. The |g:ycm_server_python_interpreter| option + 23. The |g:ycm_server_keep_logfiles| option + 24. The |g:ycm_server_log_level| option + 25. The |g:ycm_auto_start_csharp_server| option + 26. The |g:ycm_auto_stop_csharp_server| option + 27. The |g:ycm_csharp_server_port| option + 28. The |g:ycm_csharp_insert_namespace_expr| option + 29. The |g:ycm_add_preview_to_completeopt| option + 30. The |g:ycm_autoclose_preview_window_after_completion| option + 31. The |g:ycm_autoclose_preview_window_after_insertion| option + 32. The |g:ycm_max_diagnostics_to_display| option + 33. The |g:ycm_key_list_select_completion| option + 34. The |g:ycm_key_list_previous_completion| option + 35. The |g:ycm_key_invoke_completion| option + 36. The |g:ycm_key_detailed_diagnostics| option + 37. The |g:ycm_global_ycm_extra_conf| option + 38. The |g:ycm_confirm_extra_conf| option + 39. The |g:ycm_extra_conf_globlist| option + 40. The |g:ycm_filepath_completion_use_working_dir| option + 41. The |g:ycm_semantic_triggers| option + 42. The |g:ycm_cache_omnifunc| option + 43. The |g:ycm_use_ultisnips_completer| option + 44. The |g:ycm_goto_buffer_command| option + 45. The |g:ycm_disable_for_files_larger_than_kb| option + 46. The |g:ycm_python_binary_path| option + 11. FAQ |youcompleteme-faq| + 1. I used to be able to 'import vim' in '.ycm_extra_conf.py', but now can't |import-vim| + 2. On very rare occasions Vim crashes when I tab through the completion menu |youcompleteme-on-very-rare-occasions-vim-crashes-when-i-tab-through-completion-menu| + 3. I get |ImportError| exceptions that mention 'PyInit_ycm_core' or 'initycm_core' + 4. I get a linker warning regarding |libpython| on Mac when compiling YCM + 5. I get a weird window at the top of my file when I use the semantic engine |youcompleteme-i-get-weird-window-at-top-of-my-file-when-i-use-semantic-engine| + 6. It appears that YCM is not working |youcompleteme-it-appears-that-ycm-is-not-working| + 7. Sometimes it takes much longer to get semantic completions than normal |youcompleteme-sometimes-it-takes-much-longer-to-get-semantic-completions-than-normal| + 8. YCM auto-inserts completion strings I don't want! |youcompleteme-ycm-auto-inserts-completion-strings-i-dont-want| + 9. I get a 'E227: mapping already exists for <blah>' error when I start Vim |E227:-mapping-already-exists-for-blah| + 10. I get "'GLIBC_2.XX' not found (required by libclang.so)" when starting Vim |GLIBC_2.XX-not-found()| + 11. I'm trying to use a Homebrew Vim with YCM and I'm getting segfaults |youcompleteme-im-trying-to-use-homebrew-vim-with-ycm-im-getting-segfaults| + 12. I have a Homebrew Python and/or MacVim; can't compile/SIGABRT when starting |youcompleteme-i-have-homebrew-python-and-or-macvim-cant-compile-sigabrt-when-starting| + 13. Vim segfaults when I use the semantic completer in Ruby files |youcompleteme-vim-segfaults-when-i-use-semantic-completer-in-ruby-files| + 14. I get 'LONG_BIT definition appears wrong for platform' when compiling |LONG_BIT-definition-appears-wrong-for-platform| + 15. I get 'libpython2.7.a [...] relocation R_X86_64_32' when compiling |libpython2.7.a-...-relocation-R_X86_64_32| + 16. I get 'Vim: Caught deadly signal SEGV' on Vim startup |Vim:-Caught-deadly-signal-SEGV| + 17. I get 'Fatal Python error: PyThreadState_Get: no current thread' on startup |Fatal-Python-error:-PyThreadState_Get:-no-current-thread| + 12. |install.py| says python must be compiled with '--enable-framework'. Wat? + 1. YCM does not read identifiers from my tags files |youcompleteme-ycm-does-not-read-identifiers-from-my-tags-files| + 2. 'CTRL-U' in insert mode does not work |CTRL-sub-U| + 3. YCM conflicts with UltiSnips TAB key usage |youcompleteme-ycm-conflicts-with-ultisnips-tab-key-usage| + 4. Why isn't YCM just written in plain VimScript, FFS? |youcompleteme-why-isnt-ycm-just-written-in-plain-vimscript-ffs| + 5. Why does YCM demand such a recent version of Vim? |youcompleteme-why-does-ycm-demand-such-recent-version-of-vim| + 6. I get annoying messages in Vim's status area when I type |youcompleteme-i-get-annoying-messages-in-vims-status-area-when-i-type| + 7. Nasty bugs happen if I have the 'vim-autoclose' plugin installed |vim-sub-autoclose| + 8. Is there some sort of YCM mailing list? I have questions |youcompleteme-is-there-sort-of-ycm-mailing-list-i-have-questions| + 9. I get an internal compiler error when installing |youcompleteme-i-get-an-internal-compiler-error-when-installing| + 10. I get weird errors when I press 'Ctrl-C' in Vim |Ctrl-sub-C| + 11. Why did YCM stop using Syntastic for diagnostics display? |youcompleteme-why-did-ycm-stop-using-syntastic-for-diagnostics-display| + 12. Completion doesn't work with the C++ standard library headers |youcompleteme-completion-doesnt-work-with-c-standard-library-headers| + 13. When I open a JavaScript file, I get an annoying warning about '.tern-project' +file |.tern-sub-project| + 14. When I start vim I get a runtime error saying 'R6034 An application has made an +attempt to load the C runtime library incorrectly.' |R6034-An-application-has-made-an-attempt-to-load-the-C-runtime-library-incorrectly.| + 15. I hear that YCM only supports Python 2, is that true? |youcompleteme-i-hear-that-ycm-only-supports-python-2-is-that-true| + 16. On Windows I get "E887: Sorry, this command is disabled, the Python's site +module could not be loaded" |E887:-Sorry-this-command-is-disabled-the-Python-s-site-module-could-not-be-loaded| + 17. I can't complete python packages in a virtual environment. |youcompleteme-i-cant-complete-python-packages-in-virtual-environment.| + 13. Contributor Code of Conduct |youcompleteme-contributor-code-of-conduct| + 14. Contact |youcompleteme-contact| + 15. License |youcompleteme-license| + 16. References |youcompleteme-references| + +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-introduction* +Introduction ~ + +Image: Build Status [1] Image: Build status [3] + +- Intro +- Installation + + - Mac OS X + - Ubuntu Linux x64 + - Fedora Linux x64 + - Windows + - FreeBSD/OpenBSD + - Full Installation Guide + +- Quick Feature Summary +- User Guide + + - General Usage + - Client-Server Architecture + - Completion String Ranking + - General Semantic Completion + - C-family Semantic Completion + - JavaScript Semantic Completion + - Rust Semantic Completion + - Python Semantic Completion + - Semantic Completion for Other Languages + - Writing New Semantic Completers + - Diagnostic Display + + - Diagnostic Highlighting Groups + +- Commands + + - YcmCompleter subcommands + + - GoTo Commands + - Semantic Information Commands + - Refactoring and FixIt Commands + - Miscellaneous Commands + +- Functions +- Autocommands +- Options +- FAQ +- Contributor Code of Conduct +- Contact +- License + +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-intro* +Intro ~ + +YouCompleteMe is a fast, as-you-type, fuzzy-search code completion engine for +Vim. It has several completion engines: + +- an identifier-based engine that works with every programming language, + +- a Clang [5]-based engine that provides native semantic code completion for + C/C++/Objective-C/Objective-C++ (from now on referred to as "the C-family + languages"), + +- a Jedi [6]-based completion engine for Python 2 and 3 (using the JediHTTP + [7] wrapper), + +- an OmniSharp [8]-based completion engine for C#, + +- a combination of Gocode [9] and Godef [10] semantic engines for Go, + +- a TSServer [11]-based completion engine for TypeScript, + +- a Tern [12]-based completion engine for JavaScript, + +- a racer [13]-based completion engine for Rust, + +- and an omnifunc-based completer that uses data from Vim's omnicomplete + system to provide semantic completions for many other languages (Ruby, PHP + etc.). + + Image: YouCompleteMe GIF demo (see reference [14]) + +Here's an explanation of what happens in the short GIF demo above. + +First, realize that **no keyboard shortcuts had to be pressed** to get the list +of completion candidates at any point in the demo. The user just types and the +suggestions pop up by themselves. If the user doesn't find the completion +suggestions relevant and/or just wants to type, they can do so; the completion +engine will not interfere. + +When the user sees a useful completion string being offered, they press the TAB +key to accept it. This inserts the completion string. Repeated presses of the +TAB key cycle through the offered completions. + +If the offered completions are not relevant enough, the user can continue +typing to further filter out unwanted completions. + +A critical thing to notice is that the completion **filtering is NOT based on +the input being a string prefix of the completion** (but that works too). The +input needs to be a _subsequence [15] match_ of a completion. This is a fancy +way of saying that any input characters need to be present in a completion +string in the order in which they appear in the input. So 'abc' is a +subsequence of 'xaybgc', but not of 'xbyxaxxc'. After the filter, a complicated +sorting system ranks the completion strings so that the most relevant ones rise +to the top of the menu (so you usually need to press TAB just once). + +**All of the above works with any programming language** because of the +identifier-based completion engine. It collects all of the identifiers in the +current file and other files you visit (and your tags files) and searches them +when you type (identifiers are put into per-filetype groups). + +The demo also shows the semantic engine in use. When the user presses '.', '->' +or '::' while typing in insert mode (for C++; different triggers are used for +other languages), the semantic engine is triggered (it can also be triggered +with a keyboard shortcut; see the rest of the docs). + +The last thing that you can see in the demo is YCM's diagnostic display +features (the little red X that shows up in the left gutter; inspired by +Syntastic [16]) if you are editing a C-family file. As Clang compiles your file +and detects warnings or errors, they will be presented in various ways. You +don't need to save your file or press any keyboard shortcut to trigger this, it +"just happens" in the background. + +In essence, YCM obsoletes the following Vim plugins because it has all of their +features plus extra: + +- clang_complete +- AutoComplPop +- Supertab +- neocomplcache + +**And that's not all...** + +YCM also provides semantic IDE-like features in a number of languages, +including: + +- finding declarations, definitions, usages, etc. of identifiers, +- displaying type information for classes, variables, functions etc., +- displaying documentation for methods, members, etc. in the preview window, +- fixing common coding errors, like missing semi-colons, typos, etc., +- semantic renaming of variables across files (JavaScript only). + +Features vary by file type, so make sure to check out the file type feature +summary and the full list of completer subcommands to find out what's available +for your favourite languages. + +You'll also find that YCM has filepath completers (try typing './' in a file) +and a completer that integrates with UltiSnips [17]. + +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-installation* +Installation ~ + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-mac-os-x* +Mac OS X ~ + +Please refer to the full Installation Guide below; the following commands are +provided on a best-effort basis and may not work for you. + +Install the latest version of MacVim [18]. Yes, MacVim. And yes, the _latest_. + +If you don't use the MacVim GUI, it is recommended to use the Vim binary that +is inside the MacVim.app package ('MacVim.app/Contents/MacOS/Vim'). To ensure +it works correctly copy the 'mvim' script from the MacVim [18] download to your +local binary folder (for example '/usr/local/bin/mvim') and then symlink it: +> + ln -s /usr/local/bin/mvim vim +< +Install YouCompleteMe with Vundle [19]. + +**Remember:** YCM is a plugin with a compiled component. If you **update** YCM +using Vundle and the ycm_core library APIs have changed (happens rarely), YCM +will notify you to recompile it. You should then rerun the install process. + +**NOTE:** If you want C-family completion, you MUST have the latest Xcode +installed along with the latest Command Line Tools (they are installed +automatically when you run 'clang' for the first time, or manually by running +'xcode-select --install') + +Install CMake. Preferably with Homebrew [20], but here's the stand-alone CMake +installer [21]. + +_If_ you have installed a Homebrew Python and/or Homebrew MacVim, see the _FAQ_ +for details. + +Compiling YCM **with** semantic support for C-family languages: +> + cd ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe + ./install.py --clang-completer +< +Compiling YCM **without** semantic support for C-family languages: +> + cd ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe + ./install.py +< +The following additional language support options are available: + +- C# support: install Mono with Homebrew [20] or by downloading the Mono Mac + package [22] and add '--omnisharp-completer' when calling './install.py'. + +- Go support: install Go [23] and add '--gocode-completer' when calling + './install.py'. + +- TypeScript support: install Node.js and npm [24] then install the + TypeScript SDK with 'npm install -g typescript'. + +- JavaScript support: install Node.js and npm [24] and add '--tern-completer' + when calling './install.py'. + +- Rust support: install Rust [25] and add '--racer-completer' when calling + './install.py'. + +To simply compile with everything enabled, there's a '--all' flag. So, to +install with all language features, ensure 'xbuild', 'go', 'tsserver', 'node', +'npm', 'rustc', and 'cargo' tools are installed and in your 'PATH', then simply +run: +> + cd ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe + ./install.py --all +< +That's it. You're done. Refer to the _User Guide_ section on how to use YCM. +Don't forget that if you want the C-family semantic completion engine to work, +you will need to provide the compilation flags for your project to YCM. It's +all in the User Guide. + +YCM comes with sane defaults for its options, but you still may want to take a +look at what's available for configuration. There are a few interesting options +that are conservatively turned off by default that you may want to turn on. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-ubuntu-linux-x64* +Ubuntu Linux x64 ~ + +Please refer to the full Installation Guide below; the following commands are +provided on a best-effort basis and may not work for you. + +Make sure you have Vim 7.3.598 with python2 or python3 support. Ubuntu 14.04 +and later have a Vim that's recent enough. You can see the version of Vim +installed by running 'vim --version'. If the version is too old, you may need +to compile Vim from source [26] (don't worry, it's easy). + +Install YouCompleteMe with Vundle [19]. + +**Remember:** YCM is a plugin with a compiled component. If you **update** YCM +using Vundle and the ycm_core library APIs have changed (happens rarely), YCM +will notify you to recompile it. You should then rerun the install process. + +Install development tools and CMake: 'sudo apt-get install build-essential +cmake' + +Make sure you have Python headers installed: 'sudo apt-get install python-dev +python3-dev'. + +Compiling YCM **with** semantic support for C-family languages: +> + cd ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe + ./install.py --clang-completer +< +Compiling YCM **without** semantic support for C-family languages: +> + cd ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe + ./install.py +< +The following additional language support options are available: + +- C# support: install Mono [27] and add '--omnisharp-completer' when calling + './install.py'. + +- Go support: install Go [23] and add '--gocode-completer' when calling + './install.py'. + +- TypeScript support: install Node.js and npm [24] then install the + TypeScript SDK with 'npm install -g typescript'. + +- JavaScript support: install Node.js and npm [24] and add '--tern-completer' + when calling './install.py'. + +- Rust support: install Rust [25] and add '--racer-completer' when calling + './install.py'. + +To simply compile with everything enabled, there's a '--all' flag. So, to +install with all language features, ensure 'xbuild', 'go', 'tsserver', 'node', +'npm', 'rustc', and 'cargo' tools are installed and in your 'PATH', then simply +run: +> + cd ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe + ./install.py --all +< +That's it. You're done. Refer to the _User Guide_ section on how to use YCM. +Don't forget that if you want the C-family semantic completion engine to work, +you will need to provide the compilation flags for your project to YCM. It's +all in the User Guide. + +YCM comes with sane defaults for its options, but you still may want to take a +look at what's available for configuration. There are a few interesting options +that are conservatively turned off by default that you may want to turn on. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-fedora-linux-x64* +Fedora Linux x64 ~ + +Please refer to the full Installation Guide below; the following commands are +provided on a best-effort basis and may not work for you. + +Make sure you have Vim 7.3.598 with Python 2 or Python 3 support. Fedora 21 and +later have a Vim that's recent enough. You can see the version of Vim installed +by running 'vim --version'. If the version is too old, you may need to compile +Vim from source [26] (don't worry, it's easy). + +Install YouCompleteMe with Vundle [19]. + +**Remember:** YCM is a plugin with a compiled component. If you **update** YCM +using Vundle and the ycm_core library APIs have changed (happens rarely), YCM +will notify you to recompile it. You should then rerun the install process. + +Install development tools and CMake: 'sudo dnf install automake gcc gcc-c++ +kernel-devel cmake' + +Make sure you have Python headers installed: 'sudo dnf install python-devel +python3-devel'. + +Compiling YCM **with** semantic support for C-family languages: +> + cd ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe + ./install.py --clang-completer +< +Compiling YCM **without** semantic support for C-family languages: +> + cd ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe + ./install.py +< +The following additional language support options are available: + +- C# support: install Mono [28] and add '--omnisharp-completer' when calling + './install.py'. + +- Go support: install Go [23] and add '--gocode-completer' when calling + './install.py'. + +- TypeScript support: install Node.js and npm [24] then install the + TypeScript SDK with 'npm install -g typescript'. + +- JavaScript support: install Node.js and npm [24] and add '--tern-completer' + when calling './install.py'. + +- Rust support: install Rust [25] and add '--racer-completer' when calling + './install.py'. + +To simply compile with everything enabled, there's a '--all' flag. So, to +install with all language features, ensure 'xbuild', 'go', 'tsserver', 'node', +'npm', 'rustc', and 'cargo' tools are installed and in your 'PATH', then simply +run: +> + cd ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe + ./install.py --all +< +That's it. You're done. Refer to the _User Guide_ section on how to use YCM. +Don't forget that if you want the C-family semantic completion engine to work, +you will need to provide the compilation flags for your project to YCM. It's +all in the User Guide. + +YCM comes with sane defaults for its options, but you still may want to take a +look at what's available for configuration. There are a few interesting options +that are conservatively turned off by default that you may want to turn on. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-windows* +Windows ~ + +Please refer to the full Installation Guide below; the following commands are +provided on a best-effort basis and may not work for you. + +**Important:** we assume that you are using the 'cmd.exe' command prompt and +that you know how to add an executable to the PATH environment variable. + +Make sure you have at least Vim 7.3.598 with Python 2 or Python 3 support. You +can check the version and which Python is supported by typing ':version' inside +Vim. Look at the features included: '+python/dyn' for Python 2 and +'+python3/dyn' for Python 3. Take note of the Vim architecture, i.e. 32 or +64-bit. It will be important when choosing the Python installer. We recommend +using a 64-bit client. Daily updated copies of 32-bit and 64-bit Vim with +Python 2 and Python 3 support [29] are available. + +Install YouCompleteMe with Vundle [19]. + +**Remember:** YCM is a plugin with a compiled component. If you **update** YCM +using Vundle and the ycm_core library APIs have changed (happens rarely), YCM +will notify you to recompile it. You should then rerun the install process. + +Download and install the following software: + +- Python 2 or Python 3 [30]. Be sure to pick the version corresponding to + your Vim architecture. It is _Windows x86_ for a 32-bit Vim and _Windows + x86-64_ for a 64-bit Vim. We recommend installing Python 3. + +- CMake [21]. Add CMake executable to the PATH environment variable. + +- Visual Studio [31]. Download the community edition. During setup, choose + _Custom_ as the installation type and select the _Visual C++_ component. + +- 7-zip [32]. Required to build YCM with semantic support for C-family + languages. + +Compiling YCM **with** semantic support for C-family languages: +> + cd %USERPROFILE%/vimfiles/bundle/YouCompleteMe + install.py --clang-completer +< +Compiling YCM **without** semantic support for C-family languages: +> + cd %USERPROFILE%/vimfiles/bundle/YouCompleteMe + install.py +< +The following additional language support options are available: + +- C# support: add '--omnisharp-completer' when calling |install.py|. Be sure + that the build utility 'msbuild' is in your PATH [33]. + +- Go support: install Go [23] and add '--gocode-completer' when calling + |install.py|. + +- TypeScript support: install Node.js and npm [24] then install the + TypeScript SDK with 'npm install -g typescript'. + +- JavaScript support: install Node.js and npm [24] and add '--tern-completer' + when calling |install.py|. + +- Rust support: install Rust [25] and add '--racer-completer' when calling + |install.py|. + +To simply compile with everything enabled, there's a '--all' flag. So, to +install with all language features, ensure 'msbuild', 'go', 'tsserver', 'node', +'npm', and 'cargo' tools are installed and in your 'PATH', then simply run: +> + cd %USERPROFILE%/vimfiles/bundle/YouCompleteMe + python install.py --all +< +You can specify the Microsoft Visual C++ (MSVC) version using the '--msvc' +option. YCM officially supports MSVC 11 (Visual Studio 2012), 12 (2013), and 14 +(2015). + +That's it. You're done. Refer to the _User Guide_ section on how to use YCM. +Don't forget that if you want the C-family semantic completion engine to work, +you will need to provide the compilation flags for your project to YCM. It's +all in the User Guide. + +YCM comes with sane defaults for its options, but you still may want to take a +look at what's available for configuration. There are a few interesting options +that are conservatively turned off by default that you may want to turn on. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-freebsd-openbsd* +FreeBSD/OpenBSD ~ + +Please refer to the full Installation Guide below; the following commands are +provided on a best-effort basis and may not work for you. OpenBSD / FreeBSD are +not officially supported platforms by YCM. + +Make sure you have Vim 7.3.598 with Python 2 or Python 3 support. + +OpenBSD 5.5 and later have a Vim that's recent enough. You can see the version +of Vim installed by running 'vim --version'. + +FreeBSD 10.x comes with clang compiler but not the libraries needed to install. +> + pkg install llvm35 boost-all boost-python-libs clang35 + export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/usr/local/llvm35/lib/ +< +Install YouCompleteMe with Vundle [19]. + +**Remember:** YCM is a plugin with a compiled component. If you **update** YCM +using Vundle and the ycm_core library APIs have changed (happens rarely), YCM +will notify you to recompile it. You should then rerun the install process. + +Install dependencies and CMake: 'sudo pkg_add llvm boost cmake' + +Compiling YCM **with** semantic support for C-family languages: +> + cd ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe + ./install.py --clang-completer --system-libclang --system-boost +< +Compiling YCM **without** semantic support for C-family languages: +> + cd ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe + ./install.py --system-boost +< +The following additional language support options are available: + +- C# support: install Mono and add '--omnisharp-completer' when calling + './install.py'. + +- Go support: install Go [23] and add '--gocode-completer' when calling + './install.py'. + +- TypeScript support: install Node.js and npm [24] then install the + TypeScript SDK with 'npm install -g typescript'. + +- JavaScript support: install Node.js and npm [24] and add '--tern-completer' + when calling './install.py'. + +- Rust support: install Rust [25] and add '--racer-completer' when calling + './install.py'. + +To simply compile with everything enabled, there's a '--all' flag. So, to +install with all language features, ensure 'xbuild', 'go', 'tsserver', 'node', +'npm', and 'cargo' tools are installed and in your 'PATH', then simply run: +> + cd ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe + ./install.py --all +< +That's it. You're done. Refer to the _User Guide_ section on how to use YCM. +Don't forget that if you want the C-family semantic completion engine to work, +you will need to provide the compilation flags for your project to YCM. It's +all in the User Guide. + +YCM comes with sane defaults for its options, but you still may want to take a +look at what's available for configuration. There are a few interesting options +that are conservatively turned off by default that you may want to turn on. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-full-installation-guide* +Full Installation Guide ~ + +These are the steps necessary to get YCM working on a Unix OS and on Windows. + +**Note to Windows users:** we assume that you are running the 'cmd.exe' command +prompt and that the needed executables are in the PATH environment variable. Do +not just copy the shell commands. Replace '~' by '%USERPROFILE%' in them and +use the right Vim home directory. It should be 'vimfiles' by default instead of +'.vim'. + +See the _FAQ_ if you have any issues. + +**Remember:** YCM is a plugin with a compiled component. If you **update** YCM +using Vundle and the ycm_core library APIs have changed (happens rarely), YCM +will notify you to recompile it. You should then rerun the install process. + +**Please follow the instructions carefully. Read EVERY WORD.** + +1. **Ensure that your version of Vim is _at least_ 7.3.598 _and_ that it has + support for Python 2 or Python 3 scripting**. + + Inside Vim, type ':version'. Look at the first two to three lines of + output; it should say 'Vi IMproved X.Y', where X.Y is the major version + of vim. If your version is greater than 7.3, then you're all set. If your + version is 7.3 then look below that where it says, 'Included patches: + 1-Z', where Z will be some number. That number needs to be 598 or higher. + + If your version of Vim is not recent enough, you may need to compile Vim + from source [26] (don't worry, it's easy). + + After you have made sure that you have Vim 7.3.598+, type the following + in Vim: ":echo has('python') || has('python3')". The output should be 1. + If it's 0, then get a version of Vim with Python support. + + On Windows, check also if your Vim architecture is 32 or 64-bit. This is + critical because it must match the Python and the YCM libraries + architectures. We recommend using a 64-bit Vim. + +2. **Install YCM** with Vundle [19] (or Pathogen [34], but Vundle is a + better idea). With Vundle, this would mean adding a "Plugin + 'Valloric/YouCompleteMe'" line to your vimrc [35]. + + If you don't install YCM with Vundle, make sure you have run 'git + submodule update --init --recursive' after checking out the YCM + repository (Vundle will do this for you) to fetch YCM's dependencies. + +3. [Complete this step ONLY if you care about semantic completion support + for C-family languages. Otherwise it's not necessary.] + + **Download the latest version of 'libclang'**. Clang is an open-source + compiler that can compile C/C++/Objective-C/Objective-C++. The 'libclang' + library it provides is used to power the YCM semantic completion engine + for those languages. YCM is designed to work with libclang version 3.8 or + higher. + + You can use the system libclang _only if you are sure it is version 3.8 + or higher_, otherwise don't. Even if it is, we recommend using the + official binaries from llvm.org [36] if at all possible. Make sure you + download the correct archive file for your OS. + + We **STRONGLY recommend AGAINST use** of the system libclang instead of + the upstream compiled binaries. Random things may break. Save yourself + the hassle and use the upstream pre-built libclang. + +4. **Compile the 'ycm_core' library** that YCM needs. This library is the + C++ engine that YCM uses to get fast completions. + + You will need to have 'cmake' installed in order to generate the required + makefiles. Linux users can install cmake with their package manager + ('sudo apt-get install cmake' for Ubuntu) whereas other users can + download and install [21] cmake from its project site. Mac users can also + get it through Homebrew [20] with 'brew install cmake'. + + On a Unix OS, you need to make sure you have Python headers installed. On + a Debian-like Linux distro, this would be 'sudo apt-get install python- + dev python3-dev'. On Mac they should already be present. + + On Windows, you need to download and install Python 2 or Python 3 [30]. + Pick the version corresponding to your Vim architecture. You will also + need Microsoft Visual C++ (MSVC) to build YCM. You can obtain it by + installing Visual Studio [31]. MSVC 11 (Visual Studio 2012), 12 (2013), + and 14 (2015) are officially supported. + + Here we'll assume you installed YCM with Vundle. That means that the top- + level YCM directory is in '~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe'. + + We'll create a new folder where build files will be placed. Run the + following: +> + cd ~ + mkdir ycm_build + cd ycm_build +< + Now we need to generate the makefiles. If you DON'T care about semantic + support for C-family languages, run the following command in the + 'ycm_build' directory: +> + cmake -G "<generator>" . ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe/third_party/ycmd/cpp +< + where '<generator>' is 'Unix Makefiles' on Unix systems and one of the + following Visual Studio generators on Windows: + + - 'Visual Studio 11 Win64' + - 'Visual Studio 12 Win64' + - 'Visual Studio 14 Win64' + + Remove the 'Win64' part in these generators if your Vim architecture is + 32-bit. + + For those who want to use the system version of boost, you would pass + '-DUSE_SYSTEM_BOOST=ON' to cmake. This may be necessary on some systems + where the bundled version of boost doesn't compile out of the box. + + NOTE: We **STRONGLY recommend AGAINST use** of the system boost instead + of the bundled version of boost. Random things may break. Save yourself + the hassle and use the bundled version of boost. + + If you DO care about semantic support for C-family languages, then your + 'cmake' call will be a bit more complicated. We'll assume you downloaded + a binary distribution of LLVM+Clang from llvm.org in step 3 and that you + extracted the archive file to folder '~/ycm_temp/llvm_root_dir' (with + 'bin', 'lib', 'include' etc. folders right inside that folder). On + Windows, you can extract the files from the LLVM+Clang installer using + 7-zip [32]. + + NOTE: This _only_ works with a _downloaded_ LLVM binary package, not a + custom-built LLVM! See docs below for 'EXTERNAL_LIBCLANG_PATH' when using + a custom LLVM build. + + With that in mind, run the following command in the 'ycm_build' + directory: +> + cmake -G "<generator>" -DPATH_TO_LLVM_ROOT=~/ycm_temp/llvm_root_dir . ~/.vim/bundle/YouCompleteMe/third_party/ycmd/cpp +< + where '<generator>' is replaced like above. + + Now that configuration files have been generated, compile the libraries + using this command: +> + cmake --build . --target ycm_core --config Release +< + The '--config Release' part is specific to Windows and will be ignored on + a Unix OS. + + For those who want to use the system version of libclang, you would pass + '-DUSE_SYSTEM_LIBCLANG=ON' to cmake _instead of_ the + '-DPATH_TO_LLVM_ROOT=...' flag. + + NOTE: We **STRONGLY recommend AGAINST use** of the system libclang + instead of the upstream compiled binaries. Random things may break. Save + yourself the hassle and use the upstream pre-built libclang. + + You could also force the use of a custom libclang library with + '-DEXTERNAL_LIBCLANG_PATH=/path/to/libclang.so' flag (the library would + end with '.dylib' on a Mac). Again, this flag would be used _instead of_ + the other flags. **If you compiled LLVM from source, this is the flag you + should be using.** + + Running the 'cmake' command will also place the 'libclang.[so|dylib|dll]' + in the 'YouCompleteMe/third_party/ycmd' folder for you if you compiled + with clang support (it needs to be there for YCM to work). + +5. Set up support for additional languages, as desired: + +6. C# support: install Mono on non-Windows platforms [37]. Navigate to + 'YouCompleteMe/third_party/ycmd/third_party/OmniSharpServer' and run + 'msbuild' (Windows) or 'xbuild' (other platforms, using Mono) depending + on your platform. On Windows, be sure that the build utility 'msbuild' is + in your PATH [33]. + +7. Go support: install Go [23] and add it to your path. Navigate to + 'YouCompleteMe/third_party/ycmd/third_party/gocode' and run 'go build'. + +8. TypeScript support: as with the quick installation, simply 'npm install + -g typescript' after successfully installing Node.js and npm [24]. + +9. JavaScript support: install Node.js and npm [24]. Then navigate to + 'YouCompleteMe/third_party/ycmd/third_party/tern_runtime' and run 'npm + install --production' + +10. Rust support: install Rust [25]. Navigate to + 'YouCompleteMe/third_party/ycmd/third_party/racerd' and run 'cargo + build --release'. + +That's it. You're done. Refer to the _User Guide_ section on how to use YCM. +Don't forget that if you want the C-family semantic completion engine to work, +you will need to provide the compilation flags for your project to YCM. It's +all in the User Guide. + +YCM comes with sane defaults for its options, but you still may want to take a +look at what's available for configuration. There are a few interesting options +that are conservatively turned off by default that you may want to turn on. + +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-quick-feature-summary* +Quick Feature Summary ~ + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-general* +General (all languages) ~ + +- Super-fast identifier completer including tags files and syntax elements +- Intelligent suggestion ranking and filtering +- File and path suggestions +- Suggestions from Vim's OmniFunc +- UltiSnips snippet suggestions + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-c-family-languages* +C-family languages (C, C++, Objective C, Objective C++) ~ + +- Semantic auto-completion +- Real-time diagnostic display +- Go to include/declaration/definition (|GoTo|, etc.) +- Semantic type information for identifiers (|GetType|) +- Automatically fix certain errors (|FixIt|) +- View documentation comments for identifiers (|GetDoc|) + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-c* +C♯ ~ + +- Semantic auto-completion +- Real-time diagnostic display +- Go to declaration/definition (|GoTo|, etc.) +- Semantic type information for identifiers (|GetType|) +- Automatically fix certain errors (|FixIt|) +- Management of OmniSharp server instance +- View documentation comments for identifiers (|GetDoc|) + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-python* +Python ~ + +- Intelligent auto-completion +- Go to declaration/definition, find references (|GoTo|, |GoToReferences|) +- View documentation comments for identifiers (|GetDoc|) +- Restart JediHTTP [7] server using a different Python interpreter + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-go* +Go ~ + +- Semantic auto-completion +- Go to definition (|GoTo|) +- Management of 'gocode' server instance + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-typescript* +TypeScript ~ + +- Semantic auto-completion +- Renaming symbols ('RefactorRename <new name>') +- Go to definition, find references (|GoToDefinition|, |GoToReferences|) +- Semantic type information for identifiers (|GetType|) +- View documentation comments for identifiers (|GetDoc|) + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-javascript* +JavaScript ~ + +- Intelligent auto-completion +- Renaming variables ('RefactorRename <new name>') +- Go to definition, find references (|GoToDefinition|, |GoToReferences|) +- Type information for identifiers (|GetType|) +- View documentation comments for identifiers (|GetDoc|) +- Management of 'Tern' server instance + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-rust* +Rust ~ + +- Semantic auto-completion +- Go to definition (|GoTo|, |GoToDefinition|, and |GoToDeclaration| are + identical) +- Management of 'racer' server instance + +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-user-guide* +User Guide ~ + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-general-usage* +General Usage ~ + +- If the offered completions are too broad, keep typing characters; YCM will + continue refining the offered completions based on your input. + +- Filtering is "smart-case" sensitive; if you are typing only lowercase + letters, then it's case-insensitive. If your input contains uppercase + letters, then the uppercase letters in your query must match uppercase + letters in the completion strings (the lowercase letters still match both). + So, "foo" matches "Foo" and "foo", "Foo" matches "Foo" and "FOO" but not + "foo". + +- Use the TAB key to accept a completion and continue pressing TAB to cycle + through the completions. Use Shift-TAB to cycle backwards. Note that if + you're using console Vim (that is, not Gvim or MacVim) then it's likely + that the Shift-TAB binding will not work because the console will not pass + it to Vim. You can remap the keys; see the _Options [38]_ section below. + +Knowing a little bit about how YCM works internally will prevent confusion. YCM +has several completion engines: an identifier-based completer that collects all +of the identifiers in the current file and other files you visit (and your tags +files) and searches them when you type (identifiers are put into per-filetype +groups). + +There are also several semantic engines in YCM. There's a libclang-based +completer that provides semantic completion for C-family languages. There's a +Jedi-based completer for semantic completion for Python. There's also an +omnifunc-based completer that uses data from Vim's omnicomplete system to +provide semantic completions when no native completer exists for that language +in YCM. + +There are also other completion engines, like the UltiSnips completer and the +filepath completer. + +YCM automatically detects which completion engine would be the best in any +situation. On occasion, it queries several of them at once, merges the outputs +and presents the results to you. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-client-server-architecture* +Client-Server Architecture ~ + +YCM has a client-server architecture; the Vim part of YCM is only a thin client +that talks to the ycmd HTTP+JSON server [39] that has the vast majority of YCM +logic and functionality. The server is started and stopped automatically as you +start and stop Vim. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-completion-string-ranking* +Completion String Ranking ~ + +The subsequence filter removes any completions that do not match the input, but +then the sorting system kicks in. It's actually very complicated and uses lots +of factors, but suffice it to say that "word boundary" (WB) subsequence +character matches are "worth" more than non-WB matches. In effect, this means +given an input of "gua", the completion "getUserAccount" would be ranked higher +in the list than the "Fooguxa" completion (both of which are subsequence +matches). A word-boundary character are all capital characters, characters +preceded by an underscore and the first letter character in the completion +string. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-general-semantic-completion* +General Semantic Completion ~ + +- You can use Ctrl+Space to trigger the completion suggestions anywhere, even + without a string prefix. This is useful to see which top-level functions + are available for use. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-c-family-semantic-completion* +C-family Semantic Completion ~ + +YCM looks for a '.ycm_extra_conf.py' file in the directory of the opened file +or in any directory above it in the hierarchy (recursively); when the file is +found, it is loaded (only once!) as a Python module. YCM calls a 'FlagsForFile' +method in that module which should provide it with the information necessary to +compile the current file. You can also provide a path to a global +'.ycm_extra_conf.py' file, which will be used as a fallback. To prevent the +execution of malicious code from a file you didn't write YCM will ask you once +per '.ycm_extra_conf.py' if it is safe to load. This can be disabled and you +can white-/blacklist files. See the _Options_ section for more details. + +This system was designed this way so that the user can perform any arbitrary +sequence of operations to produce a list of compilation flags YCM should hand +to Clang. + +See YCM's own '.ycm_extra_conf.py' [40] for details on how this works. You +should be able to use it _as a starting point_. **Don't** just copy/paste that +file somewhere and expect things to magically work; **your project needs +different flags**. Hint: just replace the strings in the 'flags' variable with +compilation flags necessary for your project. That should be enough for 99% of +projects. + +Yes, Clang's 'CompilationDatabase' system [41] is also supported. Again, see +the above linked example file. You can get CMake to generate this file for you +by adding 'set( CMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS 1 )' to your project's +'CMakeLists.txt' file (if using CMake). If you're not using CMake, you could +use something like Bear [42] to generate the 'compile_commands.json' file. + +Consider using YCM-Generator [43] to generate the 'ycm_extra_conf.py' file. + +If Clang encounters errors when compiling the header files that your file +includes, then it's probably going to take a long time to get completions. When +the completion menu finally appears, it's going to have a large number of +unrelated completion strings (type/function names that are not actually +members). This is because Clang fails to build a precompiled preamble for your +file if there are any errors in the included headers and that preamble is key +to getting fast completions. + +Call the |:YcmDiags| command to see if any errors or warnings were detected in +your file. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-javascript-semantic-completion* +JavaScript Semantic Completion ~ + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-quick-start* +Quick start ~ + +1. Ensure that you have enabled the Tern completer. See the installation + guide for details. + +2. Create a '.tern-project' file in the root directory of your JavaScript + project, by following the instructions [44] in the Tern [12] + documentation. + +3. Make sure that Vim's working directory is a descendent of that directory + (or that directory itself) when working with JavaScript files. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-explanation* +Explanation ~ + +JavaScript completion is based on Tern [12]. This completion engine requires a +file named '.tern-project' [44] to exist in the current working directory or a +directory which is an ancestor of the current working directory when the tern +server is started. YCM starts the Tern server the first time a JavaScript file +is edited, so Vim's working directory at that time needs to be a descendent of +the directory containing the '.tern-project' file (or that directory itself). + +Alternatively, as described in the Tern documentation [45], a global '.tern- +config' file may be used. + +Multiple Tern servers, are not supported. To switch to a different JavaScript +project, you can do one of the following: + +- start a new instance of Vim from the new project's directory + +- change Vim's working directory (':cd /path/to/new/project') and restart the + ycmd server [39] (|:YcmRestartServer|) + +- change Vim's working directory (':cd /path/to/new/project'), open a + JavaScript file (or set filetype to JavaScript) and restart the Tern server + using YCM completer subcommands ':YcmCompleter StopServer' and + ':YcmCompleter StartServer'. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-tips-tricks* +Tips and tricks ~ + +This section contains some advice for configuring '.tern-project' and working +with JavaScript files. The canonical reference for correctly configuring Tern +is the Tern documentation [45]. Any issues, improvements, advice, etc. should +be sought from the Tern [12] project. For example, see the list of tern plugins +[46] for the list of plugins which can be enabled in the 'plugins' section of +the '.tern-project' file. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-configuring-tern-for-node-support* +Configuring Tern for node support ~ + +The following simple example '.tern-project' file enables nodejs support: +> + { + "plugins": { + "node": {} + } + } +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-configuring-tern-for-requirejs-support* +Configuring Tern for requirejs support ~ + +The Tern requirejs plugin requires that all included "libraries" are rooted +under the same base directory. If that's not the case for your projects, then +it is possible to make it work with appropriate symbolic links. For example, +create a directory 'ext_lib' within your project and populate it with symlinks +to your libraries. Then set up the '.tern-project' something like this: +> + { + "plugins": { + "requirejs": { + "baseURL": "./ext_lib", + } + } + } +< +Then, given the following structure: +> + ./ext_lib/mylib (symlink) + ./ext_lib/anotherlib (symlink) +< +Can be used as follows: +> + define( [ 'mylib/file1', 'anotherlib/anotherfile' ], function( f1, f2 ) { + // etc. + } ); +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-rust-semantic-completion* +Rust Semantic Completion ~ + +Completions and GoTo commands within the current crate and its dependencies +should work out of the box with no additional configuration (provided that you +built YCM with the '--racer-completer' flag; see the _Installation_ section for +details). For semantic analysis inclusive of the standard library, you must +have a local copy of the rust source code [47]. You also need to set the +following option so YouCompleteMe can locate it. +> + " In this example, the rust source code zip has been extracted to + " /usr/local/rust/rustc-1.5.0 + let g:ycm_rust_src_path = '/usr/local/rust/rustc-1.5.0/src' +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-python-semantic-completion* +Python Semantic Completion ~ + +Completion and GoTo commands work out of the box with no additional +configuration. Those features are provided by the jedi [6] library which +supports a variety of Python versions (2.6, 2.7, 3.2+) as long as it runs in +the corresponding Python interpreter. By default YCM runs jedi [6] with the +same Python interpreter used by the ycmd server [39], so if you would like to +use a different interpreter, use the following option specifying the Python +binary to use. For example, to provide Python 3 completion in your project, +set: +> + let g:ycm_python_binary_path = '/usr/bin/python3' +< +If the value of |g:ycm_python_binary_path| is an absolute path like above it +will be used as-is, but if it's an executable name it will be searched through +the PATH. So for example if you set: +> + let g:ycm_python_binary_path = 'python' +< +YCM will use the first 'python' executable it finds in the PATH to run jedi +[6]. This means that if you are in a virtual environment and you start vim in +that directory, the first 'python' that YCM will find will be the one in the +virtual environment, so jedi [6] will be able to provide completions for every +package you have in the virtual environment. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-semantic-completion-for-other-languages* +Semantic Completion for Other Languages ~ + +Python, C#, Go, Rust, and TypeScript are supported natively by YouCompleteMe +using the Jedi [6], Omnisharp [8], Gocode [9], racer [13], and TSServer [11] +engines, respectively. Check the installation section for instructions to +enable these features if desired. + +YCM will use your 'omnifunc' (see ':h omnifunc' in Vim) as a source for +semantic completions if it does not have a native semantic completion engine +for your file's filetype. Vim comes with okayish omnifuncs for various +languages like Ruby, PHP etc. It depends on the language. + +You can get stellar omnifuncs for Java and Ruby with Eclim [48]. Just make sure +you have the _latest_ Eclim installed and configured (this means Eclim '>= +2.2.*' and Eclipse '>= 4.2.*'). + +After installing Eclim remember to create a new Eclipse project within your +application by typing ':ProjectCreate <path-to-your-project> -n ruby' (or '-n +java') inside vim and don't forget to have "let g:EclimCompletionMethod = +'omnifunc'" in your vimrc. This will make YCM and Eclim play nice; YCM will use +Eclim's omnifuncs as the data source for semantic completions and provide the +auto-triggering and subsequence-based matching (and other YCM features) on top +of it. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-writing-new-semantic-completers* +Writing New Semantic Completers ~ + +You have two options here: writing an 'omnifunc' for Vim's omnicomplete system +that YCM will then use through its omni-completer, or a custom completer for +YCM using the Completer API [49]. + +Here are the differences between the two approaches: + +- You have to use VimScript to write the omnifunc, but get to use Python to + write for the Completer API; this by itself should make you want to use the + API. + +- The Completer API is a _much_ more powerful way to integrate with YCM and + it provides a wider set of features. For instance, you can make your + Completer query your semantic back-end in an asynchronous fashion, thus not + blocking Vim's GUI thread while your completion system is processing stuff. + This is impossible with VimScript. All of YCM's completers use the + Completer API. + +- Performance with the Completer API is better since Python executes faster + than VimScript. + +If you want to use the 'omnifunc' system, see the relevant Vim docs with ':h +complete-functions'. For the Completer API, see the API docs [49]. + +If you want to upstream your completer into YCM's source, you should use the +Completer API. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-diagnostic-display* +Diagnostic Display ~ + +YCM will display diagnostic notifications for C-family and C# languages if you +compiled YCM with Clang and Omnisharp support, respectively. Since YCM +continuously recompiles your file as you type, you'll get notified of errors +and warnings in your file as fast as possible. + +Here are the various pieces of the diagnostic UI: + +- Icons show up in the Vim gutter on lines that have a diagnostic. +- Regions of text related to diagnostics are highlighted (by default, a red + wavy underline in 'gvim' and a red background in 'vim'). +- Moving the cursor to a line with a diagnostic echoes the diagnostic text. +- Vim's location list is automatically populated with diagnostic data (off by + default, see options). + +The new diagnostics (if any) will be displayed the next time you press any key +on the keyboard. So if you stop typing and just wait for the new diagnostics to +come in, that _will not work_. You need to press some key for the GUI to +update. + +Having to press a key to get the updates is unfortunate, but cannot be changed +due to the way Vim internals operate; there is no way that a background task +can update Vim's GUI after it has finished running. You _have to_ press a key. +This will make YCM check for any pending diagnostics updates. + +You _can_ force a full, blocking compilation cycle with the +|:YcmForceCompileAndDiagnostics| command (you may want to map that command to a +key; try putting 'nnoremap <F5> :YcmForceCompileAndDiagnostics<CR>' in your +vimrc). Calling this command will force YCM to immediately recompile your file +and display any new diagnostics it encounters. Do note that recompilation with +this command may take a while and during this time the Vim GUI _will_ be +blocked. + +YCM will display a short diagnostic message when you move your cursor to the +line with the error. You can get a detailed diagnostic message with the +'<leader>d' key mapping (can be changed in the options) YCM provides when your +cursor is on the line with the diagnostic. + +You can also see the full diagnostic message for all the diagnostics in the +current file in Vim's 'locationlist', which can be opened with the ':lopen' and +':lclose' commands (make sure you have set 'let +g:ycm_always_populate_location_list = 1' in your vimrc). A good way to toggle +the display of the 'locationlist' with a single key mapping is provided by +another (very small) Vim plugin called ListToggle [50] (which also makes it +possible to change the height of the 'locationlist' window), also written by +yours truly. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-diagnostic-highlighting-groups* +Diagnostic Highlighting Groups ~ + +You can change the styling for the highlighting groups YCM uses. For the signs +in the Vim gutter, the relevant groups are: + +- 'YcmErrorSign', which falls back to group 'SyntasticErrorSign' and then + 'error' if they exist + +- 'YcmWarningSign', which falls back to group 'SyntasticWarningSign' and then + 'todo' if they exist + +You can also style the line that has the warning/error with these groups: + +- 'YcmErrorLine', which falls back to group 'SyntasticErrorLine' if it exists +- 'YcmWarningLine', which falls back to group 'SyntasticWarningLine' if it + exists + +Note that the line highlighting groups only work when gutter signs are turned +on. + +The syntax groups used to highlight regions of text with errors/warnings: - +'YcmErrorSection', which falls back to group 'SyntasticError' if it exists and +then 'SpellBad' - 'YcmWarningSection', which falls back to group +'SyntasticWarning' if it exists and then 'SpellCap' + +Here's how you'd change the style for a group: +> + highlight YcmErrorLine guibg=#3f0000 +< +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-commands* +Commands ~ + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *:YcmRestartServer* command + +If the ycmd completion server [39] suddenly stops for some reason, you can +restart it with this command. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *:YcmForceCompileAndDiagnostics* command + +Calling this command will force YCM to immediately recompile your file and +display any new diagnostics it encounters. Do note that recompilation with this +command may take a while and during this time the Vim GUI _will_ be blocked. + +You may want to map this command to a key; try putting 'nnoremap <F5> +:YcmForceCompileAndDiagnostics<CR>' in your vimrc. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *:YcmDiags* command + +Calling this command will fill Vim's 'locationlist' with errors or warnings if +any were detected in your file and then open it. If a given error or warning +can be fixed by a call to ':YcmCompleter FixIt', then '(FixIt available)' is +appended to the error or warning text. See the |FixIt| completer subcommand for +more information. + +NOTE: The absense of '(FixIt available)' does not strictly imply a fix-it is +not available as not all completers are able to provide this indication. For +example, the c-sharp completer provides many fix-its but does not add this +additional indication. + +The |g:ycm_open_loclist_on_ycm_diags| option can be used to prevent the +location list from opening, but still have it filled with new diagnostic data. +See the _Options_ section for details. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *:YcmShowDetailedDiagnostic* command + +This command shows the full diagnostic text when the user's cursor is on the +line with the diagnostic. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *:YcmDebugInfo* command + +This will print out various debug information for the current file. Useful to +see what compile commands will be used for the file if you're using the +semantic completion engine. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *:YcmToggleLogs* command + +This command automatically opens in windows the stdout and stderr logfiles +written by the ycmd server [39]. If one or both logfiles are already opened, +they are automatically closed. 'stderr' or 'stdout' can be specified as an +argument of this command to only open the corresponding logfile instead of +both. If this logfile is already opened, it will be closed. Only for debugging +purpose. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *:YcmCompleter* command + +This command gives access to a number of additional IDE-like features in YCM, +for things like semantic GoTo, type information, FixIt and refactoring. + +Technically the command invokes completer-specific commands. If the first +argument is of the form 'ft=...' the completer for that file type will be used +(for example 'ft=cpp'), else the native completer of the current buffer will be +used. Call 'YcmCompleter' without further arguments for a list of the commands +you can call for the current completer. + +See the file type feature summary for an overview of the features available for +each file type. See the _YcmCompleter subcommands_ section for more information +on the available subcommands and their usage. + +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-ycmcompleter-subcommands* +YcmCompleter Subcommands ~ + +NOTE: See the docs for the 'YcmCompleter' command before tackling this section. + +The invoked subcommand is automatically routed to the currently active semantic +completer, so ':YcmCompleter GoToDefinition' will invoke the |GoToDefinition| +subcommand on the Python semantic completer if the currently active file is a +Python one and on the Clang completer if the currently active file is a +C/C++/Objective-C one. + +You may also want to map the subcommands to something less verbose; for +instance, 'nnoremap <leader>jd :YcmCompleter GoTo<CR>' maps the '<leader>jd' +sequence to the longer subcommand invocation. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-goto-commands* +GoTo Commands ~ + +These commands are useful for jumping around and exploring code. When moving +the cursor, the subcommands add entries to Vim's 'jumplist' so you can use +'CTRL-O' to jump back to where you where before invoking the command (and +'CTRL-I' to jump forward; see ':h jumplist' for details). If there is more than +one destination, the quickfix list (see ':h quickfix') is populated with the +available locations and opened to full width at the bottom of the screen. You +can change this behavior by using the |YcmQuickFixOpened| autocommand. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *GoToInclude* subcommand + +Looks up the current line for a header and jumps to it. + +Supported in filetypes: 'c, cpp, objc, objcpp' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *GoToDeclaration* subcommand + +Looks up the symbol under the cursor and jumps to its declaration. + +Supported in filetypes: 'c, cpp, objc, objcpp, cs, go, python, rust' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *GoToDefinition* subcommand + +Looks up the symbol under the cursor and jumps to its definition. + +NOTE: For C-family languages **this only works in certain situations**, namely +when the definition of the symbol is in the current translation unit. A +translation unit consists of the file you are editing and all the files you are +including with '#include' directives (directly or indirectly) in that file. + +Supported in filetypes: 'c, cpp, objc, objcpp, cs, go, javascript, python, +rust, typescript' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *GoTo* subcommand + +This command tries to perform the "most sensible" GoTo operation it can. +Currently, this means that it tries to look up the symbol under the cursor and +jumps to its definition if possible; if the definition is not accessible from +the current translation unit, jumps to the symbol's declaration. For +C/C++/Objective-C, it first tries to look up the current line for a header and +jump to it. For C#, implementations are also considered and preferred. + +Supported in filetypes: 'c, cpp, objc, objcpp, cs, go, javascript, python, +rust' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *GoToImprecise* subcommand + +WARNING: This command trades correctness for speed! + +Same as the |GoTo| command except that it doesn't recompile the file with +libclang before looking up nodes in the AST. This can be very useful when +you're editing files that take long to compile but you know that you haven't +made any changes since the last parse that would lead to incorrect jumps. When +you're just browsing around your codebase, this command can spare you quite a +bit of latency. + +Supported in filetypes: 'c, cpp, objc, objcpp' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *GoToReferences* subcommand + +This command attempts to find all of the references within the project to the +identifier under the cursor and populates the quickfix list with those +locations. + +Supported in filetypes: 'javascript, python, typescript' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *GoToImplementation* subcommand + +Looks up the symbol under the cursor and jumps to its implementation (i.e. non- +interface). If there are multiple implementations, instead provides a list of +implementations to choose from. + +Supported in filetypes: 'cs' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *GoToImplementationElseDeclaration* subcommand + +Looks up the symbol under the cursor and jumps to its implementation if one, +else jump to its declaration. If there are multiple implementations, instead +provides a list of implementations to choose from. + +Supported in filetypes: 'cs' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-semantic-information-commands* +Semantic Information Commands ~ + +These commands are useful for finding static information about the code, such +as the types of variables, viewing declarations and documentation strings. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *GetType* subcommand + +Echos the type of the variable or method under the cursor, and where it +differs, the derived type. + +For example: +> + std::string s; +< +Invoking this command on 's' returns 'std::string => std::basic_string<char>' + +NOTE: Due to limitations of 'libclang', invoking this command on the word +'auto' typically returns 'auto'. However, invoking it on a usage of the +variable with inferred type returns the correct type, but typically it is +repeated due to 'libclang' returning that the types differ. + +For example: +> + const char *s = "String"; + auto x = &s; // invoking on x or auto returns "auto"; + // invoking on s returns "const char *" + std::cout << *x; // invoking on x returns "const char ** => const char **" +< +NOTE: Causes re-parsing of the current translation unit. + +Supported in filetypes: 'c, cpp, objc, objcpp, javascript, typescript' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *GetParent* subcommand + +Echos the semantic parent of the point under the cursor. + +The semantic parent is the item that semantically contains the given position. + +For example: +> + class C { + void f(); + }; + + void C::f() { + + } +< +In the out-of-line definition of 'C::f', the semantic parent is the class 'C', +of which this function is a member. + +In the example above, both declarations of 'C::f' have 'C' as their semantic +context, while the lexical context of the first 'C::f' is 'C' and the lexical +context of the second 'C::f' is the translation unit. + +For global declarations, the semantic parent is the translation unit. + +NOTE: Causes re-parsing of the current translation unit. + +Supported in filetypes: 'c, cpp, objc, objcpp' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *GetDoc* subcommand + +Displays the preview window populated with quick info about the identifier +under the cursor. Depending on the file type, this includes things like: + +- The type or declaration of identifier, +- Doxygen/javadoc comments, +- Python docstrings, +- etc. + +Supported in filetypes: 'c, cpp, objc, objcpp, cs, python, typescript, +javascript' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-refactoring-fixit-commands* +Refactoring and FixIt Commands ~ + +These commands make changes to your source code in order to perform refactoring +or code correction. YouCompleteMe does not perform any action which cannot be +undone, and never saves or writes files to the disk. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *FixIt* subcommand + +Where available, attempts to make changes to the buffer to correct the +diagnostic closest to the cursor position. + +Completers which provide diagnostics may also provide trivial modifications to +the source in order to correct the diagnostic. Examples include syntax errors +such as missing trailing semi-colons, spurious characters, or other errors +which the semantic engine can deterministically suggest corrections. + +If no fix-it is available for the current line, or there is no diagnostic on +the current line, this command has no effect on the current buffer. If any +modifications are made, the number of changes made to the buffer is echo'd and +the user may use the editor's undo command to revert. + +When a diagnostic is available, and |g:ycm_echo_current_diagnostic| is set to +1, then the text '(FixIt)' is appended to the echo'd diagnostic when the +completer is able to add this indication. The text '(FixIt available)' is also +appended to the diagnostic text in the output of the |:YcmDiags| command for +any diagnostics with available fix-its (where the completer can provide this +indication). + +NOTE: Causes re-parsing of the current translation unit. + +NOTE: After applying a fix-it, the diagnostics UI is not immediately updated. +This is due to a technical restriction in Vim. Moving the cursor, or issuing +the |:YcmForceCompileAndDiagnostics| command will refresh the diagnostics. +Repeated invocations of the |FixIt| command on a given line, however, _do_ +apply all diagnostics as expected without requiring refreshing of the +diagnostics UI. This is particularly useful where there are multiple +diagnostics on one line, or where after fixing one diagnostic, another fix-it +is available. + +Supported in filetypes: 'c, cpp, objc, objcpp, cs' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *RefactorRename-new-name* +The 'RefactorRename <new name>' subcommand ~ + +In supported file types, this command attempts to perform a semantic rename of +the identifier under the cursor. This includes renaming declarations, +definitions and usages of the identifier, or any other language-appropriate +action. The specific behavior is defined by the semantic engine in use. + +Similar to |FixIt|, this command applies automatic modifications to your source +files. Rename operations may involve changes to multiple files, which may or +may not be open in Vim buffers at the time. YouCompleteMe handles all of this +for you. The behavior is described in the following section. + +Supported in filetypes: 'javascript' (variables only), 'typescript' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-multi-file-refactor* +Multi-file Refactor ~ + +When a Refactor or FixIt command touches multiple files, YouCompleteMe attempts +to apply those modifications to any existing open, visible buffer in the +current tab. If no such buffer can be found, YouCompleteMe opens the file in a +new small horizontal split at the top of the current window, applies the +change, and then _hides_ the window. NOTE: The buffer remains open, and must be +manually saved. A confirmation dialog is opened prior to doing this to remind +you that this is about to happen. + +Once the modifications have been made, the quickfix list (see ':help quickfix') +is opened and populated with the locations of all modifications. This can be +used to review all automatic changes made. Typically, use the 'CTRL-W <enter>' +combination to open the selected file in a new split. It is possible to +customize how the quickfix window is opened by using the |YcmQuickFixOpened| +autocommand. + +The buffers are _not_ saved automatically. That is, you must save the modified +buffers manually after reviewing the changes from the quickfix list. Changes +can be undone using Vim's powerful undo features (see ':help undo'). Note that +Vim's undo is per-buffer, so to undo all changes, the undo commands must be +applied in each modified buffer separately. + +NOTE: While applying modifications, Vim may find files which are already open +and have a swap file. The command is aborted if you select Abort or Quit in any +such prompts. This leaves the Refactor operation partially complete and must be +manually corrected using Vim's undo features. The quickfix list is _not_ +populated in this case. Inspect ':buffers' or equivalent (see ':help buffers') +to see the buffers that were opened by the command. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-miscellaneous-commands* +Miscellaneous Commands ~ + +These commands are for general administration, rather than IDE-like features. +They cover things like the semantic engine server instance and compilation +flags. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *ClearCompilationFlagCache* subcommand + +YCM caches the flags it gets from the 'FlagsForFile' function in your +'ycm_extra_conf.py' file if you return them with the 'do_cache' parameter set +to 'True'. The cache is in memory and is never invalidated (unless you restart +Vim of course). + +This command clears that cache entirely. YCM will then re-query your +'FlagsForFile' function as needed in the future. + +Supported in filetypes: 'c, cpp, objc, objcpp' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *StartServer* subcommand + +Starts the semantic-engine-as-localhost-server for those semantic engines that +work as separate servers that YCM talks to. + +Supported in filetypes: 'cs, go, javascript, rust' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *StopServer* subcommand + +Stops the semantic-engine-as-localhost-server for those semantic engines that +work as separate servers that YCM talks to. + +Supported in filetypes: 'cs, go, javascript, rust' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *RestartServer* subcommand + +Restarts the semantic-engine-as-localhost-server for those semantic engines +that work as separate servers that YCM talks to. + +An additional optional argument may be supplied for Python, specifying the +python binary to use to restart the Python semantic engine. +> + :YcmCompleter RestartServer /usr/bin/python3.4 +< +Supported in filetypes: 'cs, python, rust' + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *ReloadSolution* subcommand + +Instruct the Omnisharp server to clear its cache and reload all files from +disk. This is useful when files are added, removed, or renamed in the solution, +files are changed outside of Vim, or whenever Omnisharp cache is out-of-sync. + +Supported in filetypes: 'cs' + +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-functions* +Functions ~ + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *youcompleteme#GetErrorCount* function + +Get the number of YCM Diagnostic errors. If no errors are present, this +function returns 0. + +For example: +> + call youcompleteme#GetErrorCount() +< +Both this function and |youcompleteme#GetWarningCount| can be useful when +integrating YCM with other Vim plugins. For example, a lightline [51] user +could add a diagnostics section to their statusline which would display the +number of errors and warnings. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *youcompleteme#GetWarningCount* function + +Get the number of YCM Diagnostic warnings. If no warnings are present, this +function returns 0. + +For example: +> + call youcompleteme#GetWarningCount() +< +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-autocommands* +Autocommands ~ + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *YcmQuickFixOpened* autocommand + +This 'User' autocommand is fired when YCM opens the quickfix window in response +to the 'GoTo*' and 'RefactorRename' subcommands. By default, the quickfix +window is opened to full width at the bottom of the screen and its height is +set to fit all entries. This behavior can be overridden by using the +|YcmQuickFixOpened| autocommand. For instance: +> + function s:CustomizeYcmQuickFixWindow() + " Move the window at the top of the screen. + execute "wincmd K" + " Set the window height to 5. + execute "5wincmd _" + endfunction + + autocmd User YcmQuickFixOpened call s:CustomizeYcmQuickFixWindow() +< +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-options* +Options ~ + +All options have reasonable defaults so if the plug-in works after installation +you don't need to change any options. These options can be configured in your +vimrc script [35] by including a line like this: +> + let g:ycm_min_num_of_chars_for_completion = 1 +< +Note that after changing an option in your vimrc script [35] you have to +restart Vim for the changes to take effect. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_min_num_of_chars_for_completion* option + +This option controls the number of characters the user needs to type before +identifier-based completion suggestions are triggered. For example, if the +option is set to '2', then when the user types a second alphanumeric character +after a whitespace character, completion suggestions will be triggered. This +option is NOT used for semantic completion. + +Setting this option to a high number like '99' effectively turns off the +identifier completion engine and just leaves the semantic engine. + +Default: '2' +> + let g:ycm_min_num_of_chars_for_completion = 2 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_min_num_identifier_candidate_chars* option + +This option controls the minimum number of characters that a completion +candidate coming from the identifier completer must have to be shown in the +popup menu. + +A special value of '0' means there is no limit. + +NOTE: This option only applies to the identifier completer; it has no effect on +the various semantic completers. + +Default: '0' +> + let g:ycm_min_num_identifier_candidate_chars = 0 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_auto_trigger* option + +When set to '0', this option turns off YCM's identifier completer (the as-you- +type popup) _and_ the semantic triggers (the popup you'd get after typing '.' +or '->' in say C++). You can still force semantic completion with the +'<C-Space>' shortcut. + +If you want to just turn off the identifier completer but keep the semantic +triggers, you should set |g:ycm_min_num_of_chars_for_completion| to a high +number like '99'. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_auto_trigger = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_filetype_whitelist* option + +This option controls for which Vim filetypes (see ':h filetype') should YCM be +turned on. The option value should be a Vim dictionary with keys being filetype +strings (like 'python', 'cpp' etc) and values being unimportant (the dictionary +is used like a hash set, meaning that only the keys matter). + +The '*' key is special and matches all filetypes. By default, the whitelist +contains only this '*' key. + +YCM also has a |g:ycm_filetype_blacklist| option that lists filetypes for which +YCM shouldn't be turned on. YCM will work only in filetypes that both the +whitelist and the blacklist allow (the blacklist "allows" a filetype by _not_ +having it as a key). + +For example, let's assume you want YCM to work in files with the 'cpp' +filetype. The filetype should then be present in the whitelist either directly +('cpp' key in the whitelist) or indirectly through the special '*' key. It +should _not_ be present in the blacklist. + +Filetypes that are blocked by the either of the lists will be completely +ignored by YCM, meaning that neither the identifier-based completion engine nor +the semantic engine will operate in them. + +You can get the filetype of the current file in Vim with ':set ft?'. + +Default: "{'*' : 1}" +> + let g:ycm_filetype_whitelist = { '*': 1 } +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_filetype_blacklist* option + +This option controls for which Vim filetypes (see ':h filetype') should YCM be +turned off. The option value should be a Vim dictionary with keys being +filetype strings (like 'python', 'cpp' etc) and values being unimportant (the +dictionary is used like a hash set, meaning that only the keys matter). + +See the |g:ycm_filetype_whitelist| option for more details on how this works. + +Default: '[see next line]' +> + let g:ycm_filetype_blacklist = { + \ 'tagbar' : 1, + \ 'qf' : 1, + \ 'notes' : 1, + \ 'markdown' : 1, + \ 'unite' : 1, + \ 'text' : 1, + \ 'vimwiki' : 1, + \ 'pandoc' : 1, + \ 'infolog' : 1, + \ 'mail' : 1 + \} +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_filetype_specific_completion_to_disable* option + +This option controls for which Vim filetypes (see ':h filetype') should the YCM +semantic completion engine be turned off. The option value should be a Vim +dictionary with keys being filetype strings (like 'python', 'cpp' etc) and +values being unimportant (the dictionary is used like a hash set, meaning that +only the keys matter). The listed filetypes will be ignored by the YCM semantic +completion engine, but the identifier-based completion engine will still +trigger in files of those filetypes. + +Note that even if semantic completion is not turned off for a specific +filetype, you will not get semantic completion if the semantic engine does not +support that filetype. + +You can get the filetype of the current file in Vim with ':set ft?'. + +Default: '[see next line]' +> + let g:ycm_filetype_specific_completion_to_disable = { + \ 'gitcommit': 1 + \} +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_show_diagnostics_ui* option + +When set, this option turns on YCM's diagnostic display features. See the +_Diagnostic display_ section in the _User Manual_ for more details. + +Specific parts of the diagnostics UI (like the gutter signs, text highlighting, +diagnostic echo and auto location list population) can be individually turned +on or off. See the other options below for details. + +Note that YCM's diagnostics UI is only supported for C-family languages. + +When set, this option also makes YCM remove all Syntastic checkers set for the +'c', 'cpp', 'objc' and 'objcpp' filetypes since this would conflict with YCM's +own diagnostics UI. + +If you're using YCM's identifier completer in C-family languages but cannot use +the clang-based semantic completer for those languages _and_ want to use the +GCC Syntastic checkers, unset this option. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_show_diagnostics_ui = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_error_symbol* option + +YCM will use the value of this option as the symbol for errors in the Vim +gutter. + +This option is part of the Syntastic compatibility layer; if the option is not +set, YCM will fall back to the value of the 'g:syntastic_error_symbol' option +before using this option's default. + +Default: '>>' +> + let g:ycm_error_symbol = '>>' +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_warning_symbol* option + +YCM will use the value of this option as the symbol for warnings in the Vim +gutter. + +This option is part of the Syntastic compatibility layer; if the option is not +set, YCM will fall back to the value of the 'g:syntastic_warning_symbol' option +before using this option's default. + +Default: '>>' +> + let g:ycm_warning_symbol = '>>' +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_enable_diagnostic_signs* option + +When this option is set, YCM will put icons in Vim's gutter on lines that have +a diagnostic set. Turning this off will also turn off the 'YcmErrorLine' and +'YcmWarningLine' highlighting. + +This option is part of the Syntastic compatibility layer; if the option is not +set, YCM will fall back to the value of the 'g:syntastic_enable_signs' option +before using this option's default. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_enable_diagnostic_signs = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_enable_diagnostic_highlighting* option + +When this option is set, YCM will highlight regions of text that are related to +the diagnostic that is present on a line, if any. + +This option is part of the Syntastic compatibility layer; if the option is not +set, YCM will fall back to the value of the 'g:syntastic_enable_highlighting' +option before using this option's default. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_enable_diagnostic_highlighting = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_echo_current_diagnostic* option + +When this option is set, YCM will echo the text of the diagnostic present on +the current line when you move your cursor to that line. If a |FixIt| is +available for the current diagnostic, then '(FixIt)' is appended. + +This option is part of the Syntastic compatibility layer; if the option is not +set, YCM will fall back to the value of the 'g:syntastic_echo_current_error' +option before using this option's default. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_echo_current_diagnostic = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_always_populate_location_list* option + +When this option is set, YCM will populate the location list automatically +every time it gets new diagnostic data. This option is off by default so as not +to interfere with other data you might have placed in the location list. + +See ':help location-list' in Vim to learn more about the location list. + +This option is part of the Syntastic compatibility layer; if the option is not +set, YCM will fall back to the value of the +'g:syntastic_always_populate_loc_list' option before using this option's +default. + +Default: '0' +> + let g:ycm_always_populate_location_list = 0 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_open_loclist_on_ycm_diags* option + +When this option is set, |:YcmDiags| will automatically open the location list +after forcing a compilation and filling the list with diagnostic data. + +See ':help location-list' in Vim to learn more about the location list. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_open_loclist_on_ycm_diags = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_allow_changing_updatetime* option + +When this option is set to '1', YCM will change the 'updatetime' Vim option to +'2000' (see ':h updatetime'). This may conflict with some other plugins you +have (but it's unlikely). The 'updatetime' option is the number of milliseconds +that have to pass before Vim's 'CursorHold' (see ':h CursorHold') event fires. +YCM runs the completion engines' "file comprehension" systems in the background +on every such event; the identifier-based engine collects the identifiers +whereas the semantic engine compiles the file to build an AST. + +The Vim default of '4000' for 'updatetime' is a bit long, so YCM reduces this. +Set this option to '0' to force YCM to leave your 'updatetime' setting alone. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_allow_changing_updatetime = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_complete_in_comments* option + +When this option is set to '1', YCM will show the completion menu even when +typing inside comments. + +Default: '0' +> + let g:ycm_complete_in_comments = 0 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_complete_in_strings* option + +When this option is set to '1', YCM will show the completion menu even when +typing inside strings. + +Note that this is turned on by default so that you can use the filename +completion inside strings. This is very useful for instance in C-family files +where typing '#include "' will trigger the start of filename completion. If you +turn off this option, you will turn off filename completion in such situations +as well. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_complete_in_strings = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_collect_identifiers_from_comments_and_strings* option + +When this option is set to '1', YCM's identifier completer will also collect +identifiers from strings and comments. Otherwise, the text in comments and +strings will be ignored. + +Default: '0' +> + let g:ycm_collect_identifiers_from_comments_and_strings = 0 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_collect_identifiers_from_tags_files* option + +When this option is set to '1', YCM's identifier completer will also collect +identifiers from tags files. The list of tags files to examine is retrieved +from the 'tagfiles()' Vim function which examines the 'tags' Vim option. See +":h 'tags'" for details. + +YCM will re-index your tags files if it detects that they have been modified. + +The only supported tag format is the Exuberant Ctags format [52]. The format +from "plain" ctags is NOT supported. Ctags needs to be called with the '-- +fields=+l' option (that's a lowercase 'L', not a one) because YCM needs the +'language:<lang>' field in the tags output. + +See the _FAQ_ for pointers if YCM does not appear to read your tag files. + +This option is off by default because it makes Vim slower if your tags are on a +network directory. + +Default: '0' +> + let g:ycm_collect_identifiers_from_tags_files = 0 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_seed_identifiers_with_syntax* option + +When this option is set to '1', YCM's identifier completer will seed its +identifier database with the keywords of the programming language you're +writing. + +Since the keywords are extracted from the Vim syntax file for the filetype, all +keywords may not be collected, depending on how the syntax file was written. +Usually at least 95% of the keywords are successfully extracted. + +Default: '0' +> + let g:ycm_seed_identifiers_with_syntax = 0 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_extra_conf_vim_data* option + +If you're using semantic completion for C-family files, this option might come +handy; it's a way of sending data from Vim to your 'FlagsForFile' function in +your '.ycm_extra_conf.py' file. + +This option is supposed to be a list of VimScript expression strings that are +evaluated for every request to the ycmd server [39] and then passed to your +'FlagsForFile' function as a 'client_data' keyword argument. + +For instance, if you set this option to "['v:version']", your 'FlagsForFile' +function will be called like this: +> + # The '704' value is of course contingent on Vim 7.4; in 7.3 it would be '703' + FlagsForFile(filename, client_data = {'v:version': 704}) +< +So the 'client_data' parameter is a dictionary mapping Vim expression strings +to their values at the time of the request. + +The correct way to define parameters for your 'FlagsForFile' function: +> + def FlagsForFile(filename, **kwargs): +< +You can then get to 'client_data' with "kwargs['client_data']". + +Default: '[]' +> + let g:ycm_extra_conf_vim_data = [] +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_server_python_interpreter* option + +YCM will by default search for an appropriate Python interpreter on your +system. You can use this option to override that behavior and force the use of +a specific interpreter of your choosing. + +NOTE: This interpreter is only used for the ycmd server [39]. The YCM client +running inside Vim always uses the Python interpreter that's embedded inside +Vim. + +Default: "''" +> + let g:ycm_server_python_interpreter = '' +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_server_keep_logfiles* option + +When this option is set to '1', the ycmd completion server [39] will keep the +logfiles around after shutting down (they are deleted on shutdown by default). + +To see where the logfiles are, call |:YcmDebugInfo|. + +Default: '0' +> + let g:ycm_server_keep_logfiles = 0 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_server_log_level* option + +The logging level that the ycmd completion server [39] uses. Valid values are +the following, from most verbose to least verbose: - 'debug' - 'info' - +'warning' - 'error' - 'critical' + +Note that 'debug' is _very_ verbose. + +Default: 'info' +> + let g:ycm_server_log_level = 'info' +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_auto_start_csharp_server* option + +When set to '1', the OmniSharp server will be automatically started (once per +Vim session) when you open a C# file. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_auto_start_csharp_server = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_auto_stop_csharp_server* option + +When set to '1', the OmniSharp server will be automatically stopped upon +closing Vim. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_auto_stop_csharp_server = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_csharp_server_port* option + +When g:ycm_auto_start_csharp_server is set to '1', specifies the port for the +OmniSharp server to listen on. When set to '0' uses an unused port provided by +the OS. + +Default: '0' +> + let g:ycm_csharp_server_port = 0 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_csharp_insert_namespace_expr* option + +By default, when YCM inserts a namespace, it will insert the 'using' statement +under the nearest 'using' statement. You may prefer that the 'using' statement +is inserted somewhere, for example, to preserve sorting. If so, you can set +this option to override this behavior. + +When this option is set, instead of inserting the 'using' statement itself, YCM +will set the global variable 'g:ycm_namespace_to_insert' to the namespace to +insert, and then evaluate this option's value as an expression. The option's +expression is responsible for inserting the namespace - the default insertion +will not occur. + +Default: '' +> + let g:ycm_csharp_insert_namespace_expr = '' +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_add_preview_to_completeopt* option + +When this option is set to '1', YCM will add the 'preview' string to Vim's +'completeopt' option (see ':h completeopt'). If your 'completeopt' option +already has 'preview' set, there will be no effect. You can see the current +state of your 'completeopt' setting with ':set completeopt?' (yes, the question +mark is important). + +When 'preview' is present in 'completeopt', YCM will use the 'preview' window +at the top of the file to store detailed information about the current +completion candidate (but only if the candidate came from the semantic engine). +For instance, it would show the full function prototype and all the function +overloads in the window if the current completion is a function name. + +Default: '0' +> + let g:ycm_add_preview_to_completeopt = 0 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_autoclose_preview_window_after_completion* option + +When this option is set to '1', YCM will auto-close the 'preview' window after +the user accepts the offered completion string. If there is no 'preview' window +triggered because there is no 'preview' string in 'completeopt', this option is +irrelevant. See the |g:ycm_add_preview_to_completeopt| option for more details. + +Default: '0' +> + let g:ycm_autoclose_preview_window_after_completion = 0 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_autoclose_preview_window_after_insertion* option + +When this option is set to '1', YCM will auto-close the 'preview' window after +the user leaves insert mode. This option is irrelevant if +|g:ycm_autoclose_preview_window_after_completion| is set or if no 'preview' +window is triggered. See the |g:ycm_add_preview_to_completeopt| option for more +details. + +Default: '0' +> + let g:ycm_autoclose_preview_window_after_insertion = 0 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_max_diagnostics_to_display* option + +This option controls the maximum number of diagnostics shown to the user when +errors or warnings are detected in the file. This option is only relevant if +you are using the C-family semantic completion engine. + +Default: '30' +> + let g:ycm_max_diagnostics_to_display = 30 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_key_list_select_completion* option + +This option controls the key mappings used to select the first completion +string. Invoking any of them repeatedly cycles forward through the completion +list. + +Some users like adding '<Enter>' to this list. + +Default: "['<TAB>', '<Down>']" +> + let g:ycm_key_list_select_completion = ['<TAB>', '<Down>'] +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_key_list_previous_completion* option + +This option controls the key mappings used to select the previous completion +string. Invoking any of them repeatedly cycles backwards through the completion +list. + +Note that one of the defaults is '<S-TAB>' which means Shift-TAB. That mapping +will probably only work in GUI Vim (Gvim or MacVim) and not in plain console +Vim because the terminal usually does not forward modifier key combinations to +Vim. + +Default: "['<S-TAB>', '<Up>']" +> + let g:ycm_key_list_previous_completion = ['<S-TAB>', '<Up>'] +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_key_invoke_completion* option + +This option controls the key mapping used to invoke the completion menu for +semantic completion. By default, semantic completion is trigged automatically +after typing '.', '->' and '::' in insert mode (if semantic completion support +has been compiled in). This key mapping can be used to trigger semantic +completion anywhere. Useful for searching for top-level functions and classes. + +Console Vim (not Gvim or MacVim) passes '<Nul>' to Vim when the user types +'<C-Space>' so YCM will make sure that '<Nul>' is used in the map command when +you're editing in console Vim, and '<C-Space>' in GUI Vim. This means that you +can just press '<C-Space>' in both console and GUI Vim and YCM will do the +right thing. + +Setting this option to an empty string will make sure no mapping is created. + +Default: '<C-Space>' +> + let g:ycm_key_invoke_completion = '<C-Space>' +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_key_detailed_diagnostics* option + +This option controls the key mapping used to show the full diagnostic text when +the user's cursor is on the line with the diagnostic. It basically calls +|:YcmShowDetailedDiagnostic|. + +Setting this option to an empty string will make sure no mapping is created. + +Default: '<leader>d' +> + let g:ycm_key_detailed_diagnostics = '<leader>d' +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_global_ycm_extra_conf* option + +Normally, YCM searches for a '.ycm_extra_conf.py' file for compilation flags +(see the User Guide for more details on how this works). This option specifies +a fallback path to a config file which is used if no '.ycm_extra_conf.py' is +found. + +You can place such a global file anywhere in your filesystem. + +Default: "''" +> + let g:ycm_global_ycm_extra_conf = '' +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_confirm_extra_conf* option + +When this option is set to '1' YCM will ask once per '.ycm_extra_conf.py' file +if it is safe to be loaded. This is to prevent execution of malicious code from +a '.ycm_extra_conf.py' file you didn't write. + +To selectively get YCM to ask/not ask about loading certain +'.ycm_extra_conf.py' files, see the |g:ycm_extra_conf_globlist| option. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_confirm_extra_conf = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_extra_conf_globlist* option + +This option is a list that may contain several globbing patterns. If a pattern +starts with a '!' all '.ycm_extra_conf.py' files matching that pattern will be +blacklisted, that is they won't be loaded and no confirmation dialog will be +shown. If a pattern does not start with a '!' all files matching that pattern +will be whitelisted. Note that this option is not used when confirmation is +disabled using |g:ycm_confirm_extra_conf| and that items earlier in the list +will take precedence over the later ones. + +Rules: + +- '*' matches everything +- '?' matches any single character +- '[seq]' matches any character in seq +- '[!seq]' matches any char not in seq + +Example: +> + let g:ycm_extra_conf_globlist = ['~/dev/*','!~/*'] +< +- The first rule will match everything contained in the '~/dev' directory so + '.ycm_extra_conf.py' files from there will be loaded. + +- The second rule will match everything in the home directory so a + '.ycm_extra_conf.py' file from there won't be loaded. + +- As the first rule takes precedence everything in the home directory + excluding the '~/dev' directory will be blacklisted. + +NOTE: The glob pattern is first expanded with Python's 'os.path.expanduser()' +and then resolved with 'os.path.abspath()' before being matched against the +filename. + +Default: '[]' +> + let g:ycm_extra_conf_globlist = [] +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_filepath_completion_use_working_dir* option + +By default, YCM's filepath completion will interpret relative paths like '../' +as being relative to the folder of the file of the currently active buffer. +Setting this option will force YCM to always interpret relative paths as being +relative to Vim's current working directory. + +Default: '0' +> + let g:ycm_filepath_completion_use_working_dir = 0 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_semantic_triggers* option + +This option controls the character-based triggers for the various semantic +completion engines. The option holds a dictionary of key-values, where the keys +are Vim's filetype strings delimited by commas and values are lists of strings, +where the strings are the triggers. + +Setting key-value pairs on the dictionary _adds_ semantic triggers to the +internal default set (listed below). You cannot remove the default triggers, +only add new ones. + +A "trigger" is a sequence of one or more characters that trigger semantic +completion when typed. For instance, C++ ('cpp' filetype) has '.' listed as a +trigger. So when the user types 'foo.', the semantic engine will trigger and +serve 'foo''s list of member functions and variables. Since C++ also has '->' +listed as a trigger, the same thing would happen when the user typed 'foo->'. + +It's also possible to use a regular expression as a trigger. You have to prefix +your trigger with 're!' to signify it's a regex trigger. For instance, +'re!\w+\.' would only trigger after the '\w+\.' regex matches. + +NOTE: The regex syntax is **NOT** Vim's, it's Python's [53]. + +Default: '[see next line]' +> + let g:ycm_semantic_triggers = { + \ 'c' : ['->', '.'], + \ 'objc' : ['->', '.', 're!\[[_a-zA-Z]+\w*\s', 're!^\s*[^\W\d]\w*\s', + \ 're!\[.*\]\s'], + \ 'ocaml' : ['.', '#'], + \ 'cpp,objcpp' : ['->', '.', '::'], + \ 'perl' : ['->'], + \ 'php' : ['->', '::'], + \ 'cs,java,javascript,typescript,d,python,perl6,scala,vb,elixir,go' : ['.'], + \ 'ruby' : ['.', '::'], + \ 'lua' : ['.', ':'], + \ 'erlang' : [':'], + \ } +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_cache_omnifunc* option + +Some omnicompletion engines do not work well with the YCM cache—in particular, +they might not produce all possible results for a given prefix. By unsetting +this option you can ensure that the omnicompletion engine is re-queried on +every keypress. That will ensure all completions will be presented, but might +cause stuttering and lagginess if the omnifunc is slow. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_cache_omnifunc = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_use_ultisnips_completer* option + +By default, YCM will query the UltiSnips plugin for possible completions of +snippet triggers. This option can turn that behavior off. + +Default: '1' +> + let g:ycm_use_ultisnips_completer = 1 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_goto_buffer_command* option + +Defines where 'GoTo*' commands result should be opened. Can take one of the +following values: "[ 'same-buffer', 'horizontal-split', 'vertical-split', 'new- +tab', 'new-or-existing-tab' ]" If this option is set to the "'same-buffer'" but +current buffer can not be switched (when buffer is modified and 'nohidden' +option is set), then result will be opened in horizontal split. + +Default: "'same-buffer'" +> + let g:ycm_goto_buffer_command = 'same-buffer' +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_disable_for_files_larger_than_kb* option + +Defines the max size (in Kb) for a file to be considered for completion. If +this option is set to 0 then no check is made on the size of the file you're +opening. + +Default: 1000 +> + let g:ycm_disable_for_files_larger_than_kb = 1000 +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +The *g:ycm_python_binary_path* option + +This option specifies the Python interpreter to use to run the jedi [6] +completion library. Specify the Python interpreter to use to get completions. +By default the Python under which ycmd [39] runs is used (ycmd [39] runs on +Python 2.6, 2.7 or 3.3+). + +Default: "''" +> + let g:ycm_python_binary_path = 'python' +< +NOTE: the settings above will make YCM use the first 'python' executable found +through the PATH. + +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-faq* +FAQ ~ + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *import-vim* +I used to be able to 'import vim' in '.ycm_extra_conf.py', but now can't ~ + +YCM was rewritten to use a client-server architecture where most of the logic +is in the ycmd server [39]. So the magic 'vim' module you could have previously +imported in your '.ycm_extra_conf.py' files doesn't exist anymore. + +To be fair, importing the magic 'vim' module in extra conf files was never +supported in the first place; it only ever worked by accident and was never a +part of the extra conf API. + +But fear not, you should be able to tweak your extra conf files to continue +working by using the |g:ycm_extra_conf_vim_data| option. See the docs on that +option for details. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +*youcompleteme-on-very-rare-occasions-vim-crashes-when-i-tab-through-completion-menu* +On very rare occasions Vim crashes when I tab through the completion menu ~ + +That's a very rare Vim bug most users never encounter. It's fixed in Vim +7.4.72. Update to that version (or above) to resolve the issue. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +I get *ImportError* exceptions that mention 'PyInit_ycm_core' or 'initycm_core' + +These errors are caused by building the YCM native libraries for Python 2 and +trying to load them into a Python 3 process (or the other way around). + +For instance, if building for Python 2 but loading in Python 3: +> + ImportError: dynamic module does not define init function (PyInit_ycm_core) +< +If building for Python 3 but loading in Python 2: +> + ImportError: dynamic module does not define init function (initycm_core) +< +Setting the |g:ycm_server_python_interpreter| option to force the use of a +specific Python interpreter for 'ycmd' is usually the easiest way to solve the +problem. Common values for that option are '/usr/bin/python' and +'/usr/bin/python3'. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +I get a linker warning regarding *libpython* on Mac when compiling YCM + +If the warning is "ld: warning: path '/usr/lib/libpython2.7.dylib' following -L +not a directory", then feel free to ignore it; it's caused by a limitation of +CMake and is not an issue. Everything should still work fine. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +*youcompleteme-i-get-weird-window-at-top-of-my-file-when-i-use-semantic-engine* +I get a weird window at the top of my file when I use the semantic engine ~ + +This is Vim's 'preview' window. Vim uses it to show you extra information about +something if such information is available. YCM provides Vim with such extra +information. For instance, when you select a function in the completion list, +the 'preview' window will hold that function's prototype and the prototypes of +any overloads of the function. It will stay there after you select the +completion so that you can use the information about the parameters and their +types to write the function call. + +If you would like this window to auto-close after you select a completion +string, set the |g:ycm_autoclose_preview_window_after_completion| option to '1' +in your 'vimrc' file. Similarly, the +|g:ycm_autoclose_preview_window_after_insertion| option can be set to close the +'preview' window after leaving insert mode. + +If you don't want this window to ever show up, add 'set completeopt-=preview' +to your 'vimrc'. Also make sure that the |g:ycm_add_preview_to_completeopt| +option is set to '0'. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-it-appears-that-ycm-is-not-working* +It appears that YCM is not working ~ + +In Vim, run ':messages' and carefully read the output. YCM will echo messages +to the message log if it encounters problems. It's likely you misconfigured +something and YCM is complaining about it. + +Also, you may want to run the |:YcmDebugInfo| command; it will make YCM spew +out various debugging information, including the ycmd [39] logfile paths and +the compile flags for the current file if the file is a C-family language file +and you have compiled in Clang support. Logfiles can be automatically opened in +the editor using the |:YcmToggleLogs| command. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +*youcompleteme-sometimes-it-takes-much-longer-to-get-semantic-completions-than-normal* +Sometimes it takes much longer to get semantic completions than normal ~ + +This means that libclang (which YCM uses for C-family semantic completion) +failed to pre-compile your file's preamble. In other words, there was an error +compiling some of the source code you pulled in through your header files. I +suggest calling the |:YcmDiags| command to see what they were. + +Bottom line, if libclang can't pre-compile your file's preamble because there +were errors in it, you're going to get slow completions because there's no AST +cache. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-ycm-auto-inserts-completion-strings-i-dont-want* +YCM auto-inserts completion strings I don't want! ~ + +This means you probably have some mappings that interfere with YCM's internal +ones. Make sure you don't have something mapped to '<C-p>', '<C-x>' or '<C-u>' +(in insert mode). + +YCM _never_ selects something for you; it just shows you a menu and the user +has to explicitly select something. If something is being selected +automatically, this means there's a bug or a misconfiguration somewhere. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *E227:-mapping-already-exists-for-blah* +I get a 'E227: mapping already exists for <blah>' error when I start Vim ~ + +This means that YCM tried to set up a key mapping but failed because you +already had something mapped to that key combination. The '<blah>' part of the +message will tell you what was the key combination that failed. + +Look in the _Options_ section and see if any of the default mappings conflict +with your own. Then change that option value to something else so that the +conflict goes away. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *GLIBC_2.XX-not-found()* +I get "'GLIBC_2.XX' not found (required by libclang.so)" when starting Vim ~ + +Your system is too old for the precompiled binaries from llvm.org. Compile +Clang on your machine and then link against the 'libclang.so' you just +produced. See the full installation guide for help. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-im-trying-to-use-homebrew-vim-with-ycm-im-getting-segfaults* +I'm trying to use a Homebrew Vim with YCM and I'm getting segfaults ~ + +Something (I don't know what) is wrong with the way that Homebrew configures +and builds Vim. I recommend using MacVim [18]. Even if you don't like the +MacVim GUI, you can use the Vim binary that is inside the MacVim.app package +(it's 'MacVim.app/Contents/MacOS/Vim') and get the Vim console experience. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +*youcompleteme-i-have-homebrew-python-and-or-macvim-cant-compile-sigabrt-when-starting* +I have a Homebrew Python and/or MacVim; can't compile/SIGABRT when starting ~ + +You should probably run 'brew rm python; brew install python' to get the latest +fixes that should make YCM work with such a configuration. Also rebuild Macvim +then. If you still get problems with this, see issue #18 [54] for suggestions. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-vim-segfaults-when-i-use-semantic-completer-in-ruby-files* +Vim segfaults when I use the semantic completer in Ruby files ~ + +This was caused by a Vim bug. Update your version of Vim (Vim 7.3.874 is known +to work, earlier versions may also fix this issue). + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *LONG_BIT-definition-appears-wrong-for-platform* +I get 'LONG_BIT definition appears wrong for platform' when compiling ~ + +Look at the output of your CMake call. There should be a line in it like the +following (with '.dylib' in place of '.so' on a Mac): +> + -- Found PythonLibs: /usr/lib/libpython2.7.so (Required is at least version "2.5") +< +That would be the **correct** output. An example of **incorrect** output would +be the following: +> + -- Found PythonLibs: /usr/lib/libpython2.7.so (found suitable version "2.5.1", minimum required is "2.5") +< +Notice how there's an extra bit of output there, the 'found suitable version +"<version>"' part, where '<version>' is not the same as the version of the +dynamic library. In the example shown, the library is version 2.7 but the +second string is version '2.5.1'. + +This means that CMake found one version of Python headers and a different +version for the library. This is wrong. It can happen when you have multiple +versions of Python installed on your machine. + +You should probably add the following flags to your cmake call (again, 'dylib' +instead of 'so' on a Mac): +> + -DPYTHON_INCLUDE_DIR=/usr/include/python2.7 -DPYTHON_LIBRARY=/usr/lib/libpython2.7.so +< +This will force the paths to the Python include directory and the Python +library to use. You may need to set these flags to something else, but you need +to make sure you use the same version of Python that your Vim binary is built +against, which is highly likely to be the system's default Python. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *libpython2.7.a-...-relocation-R_X86_64_32* +I get 'libpython2.7.a [...] relocation R_X86_64_32' when compiling ~ + +The error is usually encountered when compiling YCM on Centos or RHEL. The full +error looks something like the following: +> + /usr/bin/ld: /usr/local/lib/libpython2.7.a(abstract.o): relocation R_X86_64_32 against `a local symbol' can not be used when making a shared object; recompile with -fPIC +< +It's possible to get a slightly different error that's similar to the one +above. Here's the problem and how you solve it: + +Your 'libpython2.7.a' was not compiled with '-fPIC' so it can't be linked into +'ycm_core.so'. Use the '-DPYTHON_LIBRARY=' CMake flag to point it to a '.so' +version of libpython on your machine (for instance, +'-DPYTHON_LIBRARY=/usr/lib/libpython2.7.so'). Naturally, this means you'll have +to go through the full installation guide by hand. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *Vim:-Caught-deadly-signal-SEGV* +I get 'Vim: Caught deadly signal SEGV' on Vim startup ~ + +This can happen on some Linux distros. If you encounter this situation, run Vim +under 'gdb'. You'll probably see something like this in the output when Vim +crashes: +> + undefined symbol: clang_CompileCommands_dispose +< +This means that Vim is trying to load a 'libclang.so' that is too old. You need +at least a 3.8 libclang. Just go through the installation guide and make sure +you are using a correct 'libclang.so'. We recommend downloading prebuilt +binaries from llvm.org. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *Fatal-Python-error:-PyThreadState_Get:-no-current-thread* +I get 'Fatal Python error: PyThreadState_Get: no current thread' on startup ~ + +This is caused by linking a static version of |libpython| into ycmd's +'ycm_core.so'. This leads to multiple copies of the python interpreter loaded +when 'python' loads 'ycmd_core.so' and this messes up python's global state. +The details aren't important. + +The solution is that the version of Python linked and run against must be built +with either '--enable-shared' or '--enable-framework' (on OS X). This is +achieved as follows (NOTE: for Mac, replace '--enable-shared' with '--enable- +framework'): + +- When building python from source: './configure --enable-shared {options}' +- When building python from pyenv: 'PYTHON_CONFIGURE_OPTS="--enable-shared" + pyenv install {version}' + +=============================================================================== +*install.py* says python must be compiled with '--enable-framework'. Wat? + +See the previous answer for how to ensure your python is built to support +dynamic modules. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-ycm-does-not-read-identifiers-from-my-tags-files* +YCM does not read identifiers from my tags files ~ + +First, put 'let g:ycm_collect_identifiers_from_tags_files = 1' in your vimrc. + +Make sure you are using Exuberant Ctags [55] to produce your tags files since +the only supported tag format is the Exuberant Ctags format [52]. The format +from "plain" ctags is NOT supported. The output of 'ctags --version' should +list "Exuberant Ctags". + +Ctags needs to be called with the '--fields=+l' (that's a lowercase 'L', not a +one) option because YCM needs the 'language:<lang>' field in the tags output. + +NOTE: Exuberant Ctags [55] by default sets language tag for '*.h' files as +'C++'. If you have C (not C++) project, consider giving parameter '-- +langmap=c:.c.h' to ctags to see tags from '*.h' files. + +NOTE: Mac OS X comes with "plain" ctags installed by default. 'brew install +ctags' will get you the Exuberant Ctags version. + +Also make sure that your Vim 'tags' option is set correctly. See ":h 'tags'" +for details. If you want to see which tag files YCM will read for a given +buffer, run ':echo tagfiles()' with the relevant buffer active. Note that that +function will only list tag files that already exist. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *CTRL-sub-U* +'CTRL-U' in insert mode does not work ~ + +YCM keeps you in a 'completefunc' completion mode when you're typing in insert +mode and Vim disables '<C-U>' in completion mode as a "feature." Sadly there's +nothing I can do about this. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-ycm-conflicts-with-ultisnips-tab-key-usage* +YCM conflicts with UltiSnips TAB key usage ~ + +YCM comes with support for UltiSnips (snippet suggestions in the popup menu), +but you'll have to change the UltiSnips mappings. See ':h UltiSnips-triggers' +in Vim for details. You'll probably want to change some/all of the following +options: +> + g:UltiSnipsExpandTrigger + g:UltiSnipsJumpForwardTrigger + g:UltiSnipsJumpBackwardTrigger +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-why-isnt-ycm-just-written-in-plain-vimscript-ffs* +Why isn't YCM just written in plain VimScript, FFS? ~ + +Because of the identifier completion engine and subsequence-based filtering. +Let's say you have _many_ dozens of files open in a single Vim instance (I +often do); the identifier-based engine then needs to store thousands (if not +tens of thousands) of identifiers in its internal data-structures. When the +user types, YCM needs to perform subsequence-based filtering on _all_ of those +identifiers (every single one!) in less than 10 milliseconds. + +I'm sorry, but that level of performance is just plain impossible to achieve +with VimScript. I've tried, and the language is just too slow. No, you can't +get acceptable performance even if you limit yourself to just the identifiers +in the current file and simple prefix-based filtering. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-why-does-ycm-demand-such-recent-version-of-vim* +Why does YCM demand such a recent version of Vim? ~ + +During YCM's development several show-stopper bugs were encountered in Vim. +Those needed to be fixed upstream (and were). A few months after those bugs +were fixed, Vim trunk landed the 'pyeval()' function which improved YCM +performance even more since less time was spent serializing and deserializing +data between Vim and the embedded Python interpreter. A few critical bugfixes +for 'pyeval()' landed in Vim 7.3.584 (and a few commits before that). + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-i-get-annoying-messages-in-vims-status-area-when-i-type* +I get annoying messages in Vim's status area when I type ~ + +If you're referring to the 'User defined completion <bla bla> back at original' +and similar, then just update to Vim 7.4.314 (or later) and they'll go away. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *vim-sub-autoclose* +Nasty bugs happen if I have the 'vim-autoclose' plugin installed ~ + +Use the delimitMate [56] plugin instead. It does the same thing without +conflicting with YCM. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-is-there-sort-of-ycm-mailing-list-i-have-questions* +Is there some sort of YCM mailing list? I have questions ~ + +If you have questions about the plugin or need help, please use the ycm-users +[57] mailing list, _don't_ create issues on the tracker. The tracker is for bug +reports and feature requests. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-i-get-an-internal-compiler-error-when-installing* +I get an internal compiler error when installing ~ + +This can be a problem on virtual servers with limited memory. A possible +solution is to add more swap memory. A more practical solution would be to +force the build script to run only one compile job at a time. You can do this +by setting the 'YCM_CORES' environment variable to '1'. Example: +> + YCM_CORES=1 ./install.py --clang-completer +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *Ctrl-sub-C* +I get weird errors when I press 'Ctrl-C' in Vim ~ + +_Never_ use 'Ctrl-C' in Vim. + +Using 'Ctrl-C' to exit insert mode in Vim is a bad idea. The main issue here is +that 'Ctrl-C' in Vim doesn't just leave insert mode, it leaves it without +triggering 'InsertLeave' autocommands (as per Vim docs). This is a bad idea and +is likely to break many other things and not just YCM. + +Bottom line, if you use 'Ctrl-C' to exit insert mode in Vim, you're gonna have +a bad time. + +If pressing '<esc>' is too annoying (agreed, it is), we suggest mapping it to +something more convenient. On a QWERTY keyboard, a good pick for the '<esc>' +map is 'inoremap jk <Esc>'. This is right on the home row, it's an incredibly +rare digraph in English and if you ever need to type those two chars in +sequence in insert mode, you just type 'j', then wait 500ms, then type 'k'. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-why-did-ycm-stop-using-syntastic-for-diagnostics-display* +Why did YCM stop using Syntastic for diagnostics display? ~ + +Previously, YCM would send any diagnostics it would receive from the libclang +semantic engine to Syntastic for display as signs in the gutter, red squiggles +etc. Today, YCM uses its own code to do that. + +Using Syntastic for this was always a kludge. Syntastic assumes its "checker" +plugins behave in a certain way; those assumptions have never fit YCM. For +instance, YCM continuously recompiles your code in the background for C-family +languages and tries to push new diagnostics to the user as fast as possible, +even while the user types. + +Syntastic assumes that a checker only runs on file save ("active" mode) or even +less frequently, when the user explicitly invokes it ("passive" mode). This +mismatch in assumptions causes performance problems since Syntastic code isn't +optimized for this use case of constant diagnostic refreshing. + +Poor support for this use case also led to crash bugs in Vim caused by +Syntastic-Vim interactions (issue #593 [58]) and other problems, like random +Vim flickering. Attempts were made to resolve these issues in Syntastic, but +ultimately some of them failed (for various reasons). + +Implementing diagnostic display code directly in YCM resolves all of these +problems. Performance also improved substantially since the relevant code is +now written in Python instead of VimScript (which is very slow) and is tailored +only for YCM's use-cases. We were also able to introduce new features in this +area since we're now not limited to the Syntastic checker API. + +We've tried to implement this in the most backwards-compatible way possible; +YCM options that control diagnostic display fall back to Syntastic options that +control the same concepts if the user has those set. + +Still, some Syntastic-specific configuration you might have had might not be +supported by the new code. Please file issues on the tracker in such cases; if +we find the request to be reasonable, we'll find a way to address it. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-completion-doesnt-work-with-c-standard-library-headers* +Completion doesn't work with the C++ standard library headers ~ + +This is caused by an issue with libclang that only affects some operating +systems. Compiling with 'clang' the binary will use the correct default header +search paths but compiling with 'libclang.so' (which YCM uses) does not. + +Mac OS X is normally affected, but there's a workaround in YCM for that +specific OS. If you're not running that OS but still have the same problem, +continue reading. + +The workaround is to call 'echo | clang -v -E -x c++ -' and look at the paths +under the '#include <...> search starts here:' heading. You should take those +paths, prepend '-isystem' to each individual path and append them all to the +list of flags you return from your 'FlagsForFile' function in your +'.ycm_extra_conf.py' file. + +See issue #303 [59] for details. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *.tern-sub-project* +When I open a JavaScript file, I get an annoying warning about '.tern- ~ +project' file ~ + +Take a look at the instructions for using the JavaScript completer. + +If this is still really annoying, and you have a good reason not to have a +'.tern-project' file, create an empty '.tern-config' file in your home +directory and YCM will stop complaining. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +*R6034-An-application-has-made-an-attempt-to-load-the-C-runtime-library-incorrectly.* +When I start vim I get a runtime error saying 'R6034 An application has made ~ +an attempt to load the C runtime library incorrectly.' ~ + +CMake and other things seem to screw up the PATH with their own msvcrXX.dll +versions. [60] Add the following to the very top of your vimrc to remove these +entries from the path. +> + python << EOF + import os + import re + path = os.environ['PATH'].split(';') + + def contains_msvcr_lib(folder): + try: + for item in os.listdir(folder): + if re.match(r'msvcr\d+\.dll', item): + return True + except: + pass + return False + + path = [folder for folder in path if not contains_msvcr_lib(folder)] + os.environ['PATH'] = ';'.join(path) + EOF +< +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-i-hear-that-ycm-only-supports-python-2-is-that-true* +I hear that YCM only supports Python 2, is that true? ~ + +**No.** Both the Vim client and the ycmd server [39] run on Python 2 or 3. If +you work on a Python 3 project, you may need to set |g:ycm_python_binary_path| +to the Python interpreter you use for your project to get completions for that +version of Python. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +*E887:-Sorry-this-command-is-disabled-the-Python-s-site-module-could-not-be-loaded* +On Windows I get "E887: Sorry, this command is disabled, the Python's site ~ +module could not be loaded" ~ + +If you are running vim on Windows with Python 2.7.11, this is likely caused by +a bug [61]. Follow this workaround [62] or use a different version (Python +2.7.9 does not suffer from the bug). + +------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + *youcompleteme-i-cant-complete-python-packages-in-virtual-environment.* +I can't complete python packages in a virtual environment. ~ + +This means that the Python used to run JediHTTP [7] is not the Python of the +virtual environment you're in. To resolve this you either set +|g:ycm_python_binary_path| to the absolute path of the Python binary in your +virtual environment or since virtual environment will put that Python +executable first in your PATH when the virtual environment is active then if +you set |g:ycm_python_binary_path| to just "'python'" it will be found as the +first Python and used to run JediHTTP [7]. + +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-contributor-code-of-conduct* +Contributor Code of Conduct ~ + +Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct +[63]. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms. + +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-contact* +Contact ~ + +If you have questions about the plugin or need help, please use the ycm-users +[57] mailing list. + +If you have bug reports or feature suggestions, please use the issue tracker +[64]. + +The latest version of the plugin is available at +http://valloric.github.io/YouCompleteMe/. + +The author's homepage is http://val.markovic.io. + +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-license* +License ~ + +This software is licensed under the GPL v3 license [65]. © 2015-2016 +YouCompleteMe contributors + +=============================================================================== + *youcompleteme-references* +References ~ + +[1] https://travis-ci.org/Valloric/YouCompleteMe +[2] https://travis-ci.org/Valloric/YouCompleteMe.svg?branch=master +[3] https://ci.appveyor.com/project/Valloric/YouCompleteMe +[4] https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/ag9uqwi8s6btwjd8/branch/master?svg=true +[5] http://clang.llvm.org/ +[6] https://github.com/davidhalter/jedi +[7] https://github.com/vheon/JediHTTP +[8] https://github.com/OmniSharp/omnisharp-server +[9] https://github.com/nsf/gocode +[10] https://github.com/Manishearth/godef +[11] https://github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript/tree/master/src/server +[12] http://ternjs.net +[13] https://github.com/phildawes/racer +[14] http://i.imgur.com/0OP4ood.gif +[15] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subsequence +[16] https://github.com/scrooloose/syntastic +[17] https://github.com/SirVer/ultisnips/blob/master/doc/UltiSnips.txt +[18] https://github.com/macvim-dev/macvim/releases +[19] https://github.com/VundleVim/Vundle.vim#about +[20] http://brew.sh +[21] https://cmake.org/download/ +[22] http://www.mono-project.com/docs/getting-started/install/mac/ +[23] https://golang.org/doc/install +[24] https://docs.npmjs.com/getting-started/installing-node +[25] https://www.rust-lang.org/ +[26] https://github.com/Valloric/YouCompleteMe/wiki/Building-Vim-from-source +[27] http://www.mono-project.com/docs/getting-started/install/linux/#debian-ubuntu-and-derivatives +[28] http://www.mono-project.com/docs/getting-started/install/linux/#centos-7-fedora-19-and-later-and-derivatives +[29] https://bintray.com/micbou/generic/vim +[30] https://www.python.org/downloads/windows/ +[31] https://www.visualstudio.com/products/free-developer-offers-vs.aspx +[32] http://www.7-zip.org/download.html +[33] http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6319274/how-do-i-run-msbuild-from-the-command-line-using-windows-sdk-7-1 +[34] https://github.com/tpope/vim-pathogen#pathogenvim +[35] http://vimhelp.appspot.com/starting.txt.html#vimrc +[36] http://llvm.org/releases/download.html +[37] http://www.mono-project.com/docs/getting-started/install/ +[38] https://github.com/Valloric/YouCompleteMe#options +[39] https://github.com/Valloric/ycmd +[40] https://github.com/Valloric/ycmd/blob/master/cpp/ycm/.ycm_extra_conf.py +[41] http://clang.llvm.org/docs/JSONCompilationDatabase.html +[42] https://github.com/rizsotto/Bear +[43] https://github.com/rdnetto/YCM-Generator +[44] http://ternjs.net/doc/manual.html#configuration +[45] http://ternjs.net/doc/manual.html#server +[46] http://ternjs.net/doc/manual.html#plugins +[47] https://www.rust-lang.org/downloads.html +[48] http://eclim.org/ +[49] https://github.com/Valloric/ycmd/blob/master/ycmd/completers/completer.py +[50] https://github.com/Valloric/ListToggle +[51] https://github.com/itchyny/lightline.vim +[52] http://ctags.sourceforge.net/FORMAT +[53] https://docs.python.org/2/library/re.html#regular-expression-syntax +[54] https://github.com/Valloric/YouCompleteMe/issues/18 +[55] http://ctags.sourceforge.net/ +[56] https://github.com/Raimondi/delimitMate +[57] https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en#!forum/ycm-users +[58] https://github.com/Valloric/YouCompleteMe/issues/593 +[59] https://github.com/Valloric/YouCompleteMe/issues/303 +[60] http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14552348/runtime-error-r6034-in-embedded-python-application/34696022 +[61] https://github.com/vim/vim/issues/717 +[62] https://github.com/vim/vim-win32-installer/blob/master/appveyor.bat#L90 +[63] https://github.com/Valloric/YouCompleteMe/blob/master/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md +[64] https://github.com/Valloric/YouCompleteMe/issues?state=open +[65] http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html + +vim: ft=help |