ashyxz / vim-xcode

Work with Xcode projects from within Vim

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xcode.vim

Plugin for building and testing Xcode projects from within Vim

Installation

If you don't have a preferred installation method check out vim-plug:

Plug 'gfontenot/vim-xcode'

Usage

xcode.vim is a thin wrapper around xcodebuild, with some helper methods of its own. It dynamically finds the project in the current working directory (with support for workspaces as well) and builds the first scheme it finds.

  • :Xbuild will build the project
  • :Xrun will run the app in the iOS Simulator or locally on your Mac
  • :Xtest will test the project
  • :Xclean will clean the project's build directory
  • :Xopen will open the project or a specified file in Xcode
  • :Xswitch will switch the selected version of Xcode (requires sudo)
  • :Xworkspace will let you manually specify the workspace
  • :Xproject will let you manually specify the project
  • :Xscheme will let you manually specify the scheme
  • :Xsimulator will let you manually specify the simulator

Default Configuration

If xcode.vim is having trouble determining the workspace/project/scheme to use, you can set local variables to manually specify the configuration you expect:

let g:xcode_workspace_file = 'path/to/workspace.xcworkspace'
let g:xcode_project_file = 'path/to/project.xcodeproj'
let g:xcode_default_scheme = 'MyScheme'

If setting a scheme for each project doesn't work for you, you can set an ignore pattern to filter out schemes you don't want to be selected by default.

let g:xcode_scheme_ignore_pattern = "/Demo|Example/d"

You can also specify a custom default simulator & iOS to use:

let g:xcode_default_simulator = 'iPhone Xs (iOS 14.1)'
let g:xcode_default_os = '14.1'

Note that manually specifying a different value with any of the setter commands listed above will override these values until you restart Vim.

This is most useful when placed inside a project-specific vimrc (See the Argo vimrc as an example). You can make sure Vim loads these local vimrc files by default by setting the following in your main vimrc:

set secure  " Don't let external configs do scary shit
set exrc    " Load local vimrc if found

xcpretty support

xcpretty is a gem for improving the output of xcodebuild. By default, if you have it installed, xcode.vim will pipe all xcodebuild output through xcpretty with the --color flag.

For customization options, see the included help doc (:help xcode from within Vim).

Async builds

By default, xcode.vim will take over the current terminal session to build and display the build/test log. However, with long build times, this might not be ideal. To help with this, xcode.vim allows you to customize the runner by setting g:xcode_runner_command. This variable should be a template string, where {cmd} will be replaced by the xcodebuild command.

let g:xcode_runner_command = 'VtrSendCommandToRunner! {cmd}'

This is useful for using xcode.vim with other plugins such as vim-tmux-runner and vim-dispatch.

For more info, see the included help doc (:help xcode from within Vim).

License

xcode.vim is copyright © 2015 Gordon Fontenot. It is free software, and may be redistributed under the terms specified in the LICENSE file.

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Work with Xcode projects from within Vim

License:MIT License


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