If I invoke vim foo/bar/somefile
but foo/bar
don't already exist, Vim refuses to save.
I know I could switch to a shell or do :!mkdir foo/bar
from Vim but I'm lazy :)
Is there a way to make Vim do that automatically when it saves the buffer?
augroup BWCCreateDir
autocmd!
autocmd BufWritePre * if expand("<afile>")!~#'^\w\+:/' && !isdirectory(expand("%:h")) | execute "silent! !mkdir -p ".shellescape(expand('%:h'), 1) | redraw! | endif
augroup END
Note the conditions: expand("<afile>")!~#'^\w\+:/'
will prevent vim from creating directories for files like ftp://*
and !isdirectory
will prevent expensive mkdir call.
Update: sligtly better solution that also checks for non-empty buftype and uses mkdir()
:
function s:MkNonExDir(file, buf)
if empty(getbufvar(a:buf, '&buftype')) && a:file!~#'\v^\w+\:\/'
let dir=fnamemodify(a:file, ':h')
if !isdirectory(dir)
call mkdir(dir, 'p')
endif
endif
endfunction
augroup BWCCreateDir
autocmd!
autocmd BufWritePre * :call s:MkNonExDir(expand('<afile>'), +expand('<abuf>'))
augroup END
Based on the suggestions to my question, here's what I ended up with:
function WriteCreatingDirs()
execute ':silent !mkdir -p %:h'
write
endfunction
command W call WriteCreatingDirs()
This defines the :W
command. Ideally, I'd like to have all of :w!
, :wq
, :wq!
, :wall
etc work the same, but I'm not sure if it's possible without basically reimplementing them all with custom functions.
:W
, my screen becomes almost blank. I'll try and remove my previous options and give feedback.
Sep 3, 2016 at 14:28
execute
line with the following two to fix all issues: let mkdircommand="mkdir -p '" . expand("%:h") . "'"
then execute 'call system(mkdircommand)'
. This way the screen also doesn't flash to execute the mkdir command. And it should also work with directories with spaces
This code will prompt you to create the directory with :w
, or just do it with :w!
:
augroup vimrc-auto-mkdir
autocmd!
autocmd BufWritePre * call s:auto_mkdir(expand('<afile>:p:h'), v:cmdbang)
function! s:auto_mkdir(dir, force)
if !isdirectory(a:dir)
\ && (a:force
\ || input("'" . a:dir . "' does not exist. Create? [y/N]") =~? '^y\%[es]$')
call mkdir(iconv(a:dir, &encoding, &termencoding), 'p')
endif
endfunction
augroup END
I added this to my ~/.vimrc
cnoremap mk. !mkdir -p <c-r>=expand("%:h")<cr>/
If I need to create the directory I'm in I type :mk.
and it replaces that with "!mkdir -p /path/to/my/file/" and allows me to review the command before I invoke it.
I am failing to see why everyone tries complicated functions. This is enough to create parent folders
:!mkdir -p %:p:h
mkdir -p
is the shell command to create folders with parents%:p:h
is the folder path with
%
: path given when vim starts: vim foo/bar/file.ext
:p
: gives full path: /home/user/foo/bar/file.ext
:h
: removes file name from final string: /home/user/foo/bar
%:h
also works and gives relative path: foo/bar
I made :saveas!
create the directory if missing: https://github.com/henrik/dotfiles/commit/54cc9474b345332cf54cf25b51ddb8a9bd00a0bb
I think I managed to do this in three lines, combining what others are saying on this answer.
This seems to do the trick:
if has("autocmd")
autocmd BufWritePre * :silent !mkdir -p %:p:h
end
It attempts to create the folder automatically when saving a buffer. If anything bad happens (i.e. permission issues) it will just shut up and let the file write fail.
If anyone sees any obvious flaws, please post a comment. I'm not very versed in vimscript.
EDIT: Notes thanks to ZyX
%
in such scripts. Vim is not going to escape any special symbols: for example, if you are editing a file named /mnt/windows/Documents and Settings/User/_vimrc
you will end up having four new directories: /mnt/windows/Documents
, ./and
, ./Settings
and ./Settings/User
. And, by the way, you don’t need :execute
here.
system()
function for completely silent shell calls, but you don’t need both :execute
and %:p:h
: :silent !mkdir -p %:p:h
works exactly as what you have wrote (though you may need :redraw!
at the end, in this case :execute
comes handy), but it is better to use call system('mkdir -p '.shellescape(expand('%:p:h')))
. Do use :execute '!command' shellescape(arg, 1)
(with the second argument to shellescape) if you have to use bangs instead of system()
. Do use bangs if escaped argument contains newlines.
:source ~/.vimrc
) (this is what augroup
and autocmd!
are for), scrapped view after launching shell commands (that is what redraw!
is for), creating garbage directories in case of using pseudo-files (in first code snipped it is checked by only matching filename against a pattern, but in second one I also check &buftype
) and useless shell call in case directory exists (isdirectory()
condition).
%
expansion to ever suggest using it to anybody. Pseudo files are used in a big bunch of plugins (e.g. fugitive or my aurum), thus they are worth caring about. Resourcing vimrc is also a common practice. You can have whatever you want in the vimrc, just do not suggest it as an answer. Using :silent! call mkdir(expand('%:p:h'), 'p')
variant solves two of the points I mentioned and third I did not mention: !mkdir
is not going to work on windows.
You can install a plugin for this, such as https://github.com/DataWraith/auto_mkdir
To use vim's built-in plugin management, clone it like so:
git clone https://github.com/DataWraith/auto_mkdir ~/.vim/pack/vendor/start/auto_mkdir
and it'll be active the next time you open vim.
mkdir -p %:h
is better because it works for nested non-existing paths, doesn’t raise an error when the path already exists, and%:h
is the full path of the current file. However, I don’t know how to invoke this automatically. Normally, this is done with automcommands but theBufWritePre
event doesn’t seem to work here.write
and calls the system tomkdir -p
ondirname
otherwise, map it toW
... I'm too lazy to search for the syntax and to post it as an answer... Sorry:w
tomkdir -p %:h
followed by the builting:write