I have a project with a bunch of C++ header files that follow the standard C++ header naming convention; that is, a class called Foo would be declared in a file called Foo, not Foo.h or Foo.hh. Is there a good way to configure vim to do syntax highlighting for these files only? A slightly-less-pleasing fallback would be to enable C++-style highlighting for all files that don't have an extension. I'm not sure if there's any more sophisticated way to detect the type of file instead of relying solely on its extension.
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You can use the This makes it a great place to set parameters for coding guidelines, folding. Some options cannot be set for security reasons. See the documentation for more information. Put this at the top or bottom of the file:
EDIT: More details, prompted by the comments :) : It will only work if modeline is enabled. In normal circumstances it should be by default. To make sure it is enabled, or to change the size of the area it is detected in, set the
will make sure the line like the one quoted above will be detected in the first five or the last five lines of each file. Inside the modeline, EDIT 2: Without the modeline, with a bit more work, if you can identify a magic pattern:
Meaning: Every time you open a file, check if |
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With default vim settings, add this to the top of a file to have vim pick up the filetype:
If you are in another language, adjust accordingly, e.g.:
modeline Versus modelines ClarificationIn the answer, http://stackoverflow.com/a/10584645,
Should be:
See docs: http://stackoverflow.com/a/10584645. Specifically, modeline is a boolean enable flag that is on by default http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/options.html#%27modeline%27, and modelines takes an integer argument (defaulting to 5 in any case) that sets the number of lines to be looked at if modeline is enabled http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/options.html#%27modelines%27. None of this is of interest to the OP, but I add it here for anyone who arrives from a search to remind themselves how to tell vim the filetype at the top of a file. |
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