Vim's default html indentation doesn't indent <p>
tags. This means that, not only would it not remove a level of indent after </p>
, but it also probably doesn't add a level of indent automatically after the opening <p>
. If that's the case, you can change this behaviour by setting the variable g:html_indent_tags
. It should contain a regular expression that matches the tag's name. For example:
let g:html_indent_tags = 'p\|li\|nav'
This will add a level of indent for the p
, li
and nav
tags. If you want the <p>
tags only, just set it to "p":
let g:html_indent_tags = 'p'
If vim really is indenting the initial <p>
, then it's possible that your indentkeys
option doesn't contain the ">" character. You can check its contents by executing set indentkeys
. If it doesn't contain <>>
, you could add it in .vim/ftplugin/html.vim
:
setlocal indentkeys+=<<>
EDIT:
Unfortunately, vim seems to unlet that variable... This doesn't make sense to me at all, but one thing you could do is add that variable assignment to .vim/after/ftplugin/html.vim
instead. This should do the trick. Personally, I've done something different -- I've copied the default file to .vim/indent/html.vim
and commented out the lines that remove the variable. Still, using the after
directory is probably a better idea.
EDIT:
The html5 plugin seems not to suffer from this issue. It could be a good idea to just install that instead. Otherwise, the g:html_indent_tags
variable is still the place to go, but the best place for it is probably ~/.vim/after/indent/html.vim
:
let g:html_indent_tags .= '\|p\|nav\|othertags'
Note the usage of .=
instead of =
. This is in-place concatenation. You need it, since the variable already exists at this point and you don't want to delete it.