5

I am typing in my .html.erb file and I realize this weird behaviour of vim indentation.

<p>
  <strong>Expires On:</strong>
  <%= @item.expires_on %>
</p>

How come when I press enter after </p> this happens?

<p>
  <strong>Expires On:</strong>
  <%= @item.expires_on %>
  </p>
  _ <= new cursor space 

Note that I do have filetype indent on.

3 Answers 3

4

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.

6
  • Weird I put let g:html_indent_tags = 'p\|li\|nav' in my .vimrc but it has no effect but then when I actually run it in the vim window it works. Where should I put this?
    – xjq233p_1
    Sep 8, 2011 at 7:19
  • Er, right, seems there's a bit of a problem with this solution. I've updated my answer. Sep 8, 2011 at 7:54
  • I set that variable (and doing :let g:html_indent_tags shows that it hasn't been unlet), but it's still not indenting <p> tags or <li> tags.
    – steve
    Jan 22, 2013 at 19:43
  • Vim unlets the variable, but also lets it again afterwards to assign a pattern to it that looks like the example I gave. Even if the variable exists, it may not have the correct value. If it doesn't start with p\|li\|nav, then it won't indent these tags. To resolve this, you could copy the default file to your ~/.vim/indent/html.vim and delete the unlet, like I explained above. To make it easier, here is the tweaked file in my own vimfiles: github.com/AndrewRadev/Vimfiles/blob/master/indent/html.vim. Using this, you should be able to set g:html_indent_tags to whatever you need Jan 24, 2013 at 20:17
  • 1
    Your recommended HTML5 plugin really does the trick for me as a HTML5 and .erb user. Thanks!
    – cseelus
    Feb 19, 2014 at 17:30
1

I had the same problem. Tim Pope has an excellent Vim plugin that adds indentation for things missing by default. https://github.com/tpope/vim-ragtag

1
  • He has a whole set of useful Vim plugins. vim-rails is extremely powerful; I also use vim-ruby vim-bundler vim-sleuth and vim-unimpaired.
    – bjnord
    Aug 31, 2017 at 20:14
0

I got to this question via the Almighty Google.

To complement on what Andrew said above, for those of you on OSX you might want to take a peek at /Applications/MacVim.app/Contents/Resources/vim/runtime/indent/html.vim and the modifications necessary should become evident.

I can't believe I spent so much time suffering from poorly indented <li>s!

2
  • 1
    "modifications necessary should become evident"... you couldn't provide a code sample? I made the modifications that I assumed were necessary and no dice. Maybe it's because I use Janus, though...?
    – steve
    Jan 22, 2013 at 19:45
  • 2
    Oh. Sorry. You just add call <SID>HtmlIndentPush('li'), call <SID>HtmlIndentPush('p'), etc :). You have to make sure Janus/Your Vimrc isn't loading a different html indent file, however.
    – phillmv
    Jan 23, 2013 at 0:23

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