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I carry a vimrc to all the machines that I work on and it naturally contains options that are not present in old vi.

If I accidentally start a vi session on a machine where vi is not an alias to vim and/or vim is not installed, vi reads vimrc and throws a bunch of annoying errors to let me know that option such and such are unsupported.

I know I can just always type "vim" instead of "vi" and set the EDITOR variable to vim (for visudo etc...), but is there a line I can add to the top of the vimrc that will exit the script early if the file is read by vi?

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3 Answers

vote up 21 vote down check

If vi is not actually a link to vim, it should not read .vimrc, it should read .exrc. The fact that it is reading .vimrc indicates it is actually an earlier version of vim. If that is the case, you can use the vim "if" construct to bracket newer features, like this:

:if version >= 500
:  version-5-specific-commands
:endif

Type:

:help if

when in vim for more info.

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Ah ha! I knew something was fishy about vi reading vimrc. Thanks! – guns Mar 11 at 23:15
Type :version to figure out which version of Vim it is. – George V. Reilly Mar 25 at 5:04
vote up 5 vote down

Non-vim doesn't read a .vimrc, it's looking for a .exrc. You can detect older versions of vim using "if version >= 500"

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vote up 4 vote down

If you want to get more specific in your checks you can check for individual features too.

I have this in my .vimrc:

if has("eval")
    " Syntax stuff
    let java_highlight_all=1
endif


if has("autocmd")
    " Buffers
    autocmd BufEnter * cd %:p:h
endif
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