This is a SLIME inspired tmux integration plugin for Vim. It makes it easy to interact with different tmux panes directly from Vim. It has two styles for interacting with panes. REPL and Shell styles.
REPL commands are designed to work with various Read Eval Print Loops such as
python
, irb
(Ruby), node
(Javascript), coffee
(CoffeeScript) etc.
This is loosely modelled after SLIME for Emacs. Shell commands are designed
to work with normal shells such as bash
. These are useful for running tests for
example.
Main difference between these is pane configuration visibility. Each buffer has own configuration for REPL, but for Shell there is only one global configuration. The configuration is prompted from user when the commands are used for the first time. The configuration happens interactively. You will see list of available tmux panes and you can choose one by hitting enter on top of one.
Also REPL commands can have custom pre, post and escape hooks. These allows interaction with some more complex REPLs such as the CoffeeScript REPL.
This plugin borrows ideas and some code from vim-slime.
Blog post
http://esa-matti.suuronen.org/blog/2012/04/19/slimux-tmux-plugin-for-vim/
Ascii.io screencast
Use pathogen and put files to
$HOME/.vim/bundle/slimux/
Slimux requires fairly recent tmux version. Be sure you have 1.5.x or later.
Send current line to configured pane.
Send last visually selected text to configured pane.
Prompt pane configuration for current buffer.
Prompt for a shell command and send it to configured tmux pane.
Rerun last shell command(prompts for a shell command if none was run before).
Specify a shell command to run directly, without the prompt:
:SlimuxShellRun rspec spec/foo_spec.rb
Suitable for mapping and other automation.
Note that you need to escape strings intended for the shell. E.g. to list files with actual asterisks in their name:
:SlimuxShellRun ls *\**
Select the tmux pane to which shell commands will be sent. If executed without a parameter it prompts global pane configuration for the shell commands. If called with parameter it selects the pane without user interaction, which will aid multi-pane workflows. Parameter is the tmux pane identifier in \d:\d:\d form and completed automatically with cline completion.
Prompt for a key sequence using the 'tmux send-keys' syntax and send it to a configured tmux pane. E.g. Lets say you want to stop the webserver currently running in a shell(ctrl+c) and restart it(assuming the command to start is 'make run-server'):
:SlimuxSendKeysPrompt
KEYS>C-C 'make run-server' Enter
or run previous command with
KEYS>Up Enter
In short, some strings such as 'C-C' or 'Enter' have special meanings, while others are sent as a sequence of character keys(in the above example, 'make run-server')
Resends the last key sequence sent(prompts for a sequence if none was sent before).
Prompt global pane configuration to send the key sequence.
Slimux does not force any shortcuts on your Vim, but here's something you can
put to your .vimrc
map <Leader>s :SlimuxREPLSendLine<CR>
vmap <Leader>s :SlimuxREPLSendSelection<CR>
map <Leader>a :SlimuxShellLast<CR>
map <Leader>k :SlimuxSendKeysLast<CR>
Or if you like something more Emacs Slime style try something like this:
map <C-c><C-c> :SlimuxREPLSendLine<CR>
vmap <C-c><C-c> :SlimuxREPLSendSelection<CR>
You may also add shortcuts to other commands too.
For Scheme/Racket Slimux has few extra bindings. Enable them with
let g:slimux_scheme_keybindings=1
let g:slimux_racket_keybindings=1
For more information refer to the scheme plugin header.
Usually new there is no need to do anything. For example Ruby and Node.js REPLs works just fine out of box, but for some languages you have to do some preprocessing before the code can be sent. There are three hooks you can specify for each language.
Custom escaping function
function SlimuxEscape_<filetype>(text)
return a:text
endfunction
Pre send hook
function SlimuxPre_<filetype>(target_pane)
endfunction
Post send hook
function SlimuxPost_<filetype>(target_pane)
endfunction
Just add these to ftplugin directory contained within this plugin (and sent a pull request on Github!). You can use Python and CoffeeScript hooks as examples.
-
g:slimux_select_from_current_window = 1
select panes only from current window. Defaults to0
to select panes from all tmux panes. -
g:slimux_pane_format
customize the formatting of the panes, see the FORMATS section inman tmux
.
The string "#{pane_id}:
" is always prepended to the format so Slimux can identify the selected pane.
Before I created this plugin I tried several others, but non of them satisfied me. They where too complicated or just didn't support the languages I needed. So if Slimux isn't your cup of tea, maybe one of these is: