I'm using Mac OSX (10.9) and I'm trying to configure my vimrc file by adding "set number". I found my vimrc file in user/share/vim/ but I can't edit it because it's read-only. How can I fix this and read it?
1 Answer
You should not overwrite the system vimrc for various reasons. One being that with a system upgrade it will be overwritten.
Instead you can create a new .vimrc file in your home directory. Open the terminal and enter:
vim ~/.vimrc
There you can enter your various configurations. When done, you need to save the file and restart vim.
To be sure which vimrc is being used, you can ask inside of vim by typing:
:echo $MYVIMRC
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18So to emphasize,
/usr/share/vim/.vimrc
is not "your" file; anything outside of/home/you
is a system file which you should not muck with in the vast majority of cases.– tripleeeAug 12, 2014 at 20:13 -
2On my own computer, as
root
I want to be able to muck with whatever I want. And I wanted vim to behave uniformly regardless if I wasroot
or any other user. So, it would be logical to set certain things globally instead of having a number of user-specific config files. All in all, the original question is not answered. Feb 23, 2018 at 16:13 -
@SzilardBarany yeah and we agree it is your file if it's your computer, maybe this will help , in the case eg of a mac where eg
sudo vim /usr/share/vim/.vimrc
doesn't cut it apple.stackexchange.com/questions/359319/…– barlopMay 4, 2019 at 6:05 -
@Munen. Thank you for the comment. A question: once you have created the .vimrc file, how do you do to access it (find it) and edit it?– ecjbJun 22, 2019 at 15:27
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1@ecjb I'm not sure I understand the question. If you're asking how I find the file, my answer is that the
.vimrc
file for your logged in user will be in the home directory of said user. Therefore, I'd find and edit it using this command:vim ~/.vimrc
Jun 23, 2019 at 16:50
vimrc
file you can do it by typing:sudo vim ./vimrc
in theuser/share/vim
folder