Plugin for building and testing Xcode projects from within Vim
If you don't have a preferred installation method check out vim-plug:
Plug 'gfontenot/vim-xcode'
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
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 to use:
let g:xcode_default_simulator = 'iPhone 5'
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
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).
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).
xcode.vim is copyright © 2015 Gordon Fontenot. It is free software, and may be
redistributed under the terms specified in the LICENSE
file.