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How can I have changes in my vimrc take effect without restarting VIM?

3 Answers 3

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You can just source it, like this:

:so ~/.vimrc

Also, for convenience, it usually gets mapped to something quicker to type:

nmap <silent> <leader>sv :so $MYVIMRC<CR>

And then of course, it would be nice to open vimrc a little quicker:

nmap <silent> <leader>ev :e $MYVIMRC<CR>
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  • hey, is 'so' the same thing as 'source'??? i remember that 'source .bashrc' or smt similar worked for shell... Nov 1, 2010 at 2:15
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    @playcat yes and no... :so is shorthand for :source, but it is a different command than the bash source builtin. The difference of course that vim's :source runs a vim script in the current vim session, while bash's source runs a bash script in the current bash session. Nov 1, 2010 at 2:39
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    @Peter BTW, what is the meaning of <silent> and <leader>?
    – satoru
    Nov 1, 2010 at 3:23
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    <silent> just means the command isn't echoed to the status line when it runs, and <leader> is the key used as a prefix to allow you to define shortcuts on most keys. I use ',' so I type ',sv' to reload my vimrc. Nov 1, 2010 at 3:41
  • What if I want the command to echo? Removing silent still doesn't let me know that the file was sourced. Doing plain ':so $MYVIMRC' from normal mode still doesn't echo anything... I could swear it did before... Mar 21, 2013 at 19:52
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You can automate this by creating an autocmd that sources the .vimrc file every time it is saved:

autocmd BufWritePost .vimrc so %
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    Shouldn't that be ~/.vimrc so if you edit a .vimrc elsewhere (perhaps in a vcs repo), you don't accidentally source it? Or even $MYVIMRC instead?
    – Roger Pate
    Nov 1, 2010 at 16:32
  • auto but not suggest, because it cause more time after :write, even dead after change to $MYVIMRC. nmap solution is suggest.
    – Cui Mingda
    Aug 23, 2020 at 3:57
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If you are editing it,just type:

:so %
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  • prefered nnoremap <silent><buffer> <leader>so :w<CR>:so %<CR>
    – Cui Mingda
    Aug 23, 2020 at 4:01

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