136

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?

3
  • 14
    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 the BufWritePre event doesn’t seem to work here. Nov 27, 2010 at 17:11
  • Define a function which checks if the file exists and calls the builtin write and calls the system to mkdir -p on dirname otherwise, map it to W... I'm too lazy to search for the syntax and to post it as an answer... Sorry
    – khachik
    Nov 27, 2010 at 17:16
  • 1
    I guess I could combine both your suggestions and alias :w to mkdir -p %:h followed by the builting :write Nov 27, 2010 at 17:47

8 Answers 8

97
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
15
  • 1
    Thanks, seems much cleaner than what I guess-hacked :) Nov 28, 2010 at 8:19
  • 11
    call mkdir(expand('%:h'), 'p') might be more portable. Aug 21, 2012 at 12:19
  • 1
    @MariusGedminas I'd like to see the complete code with that change. Could you please post it as an answer / upload it somewhere?
    – kikito
    Sep 26, 2012 at 10:07
  • @kikito See my answer. It was edited a few hours after that comment.
    – ZyX
    Sep 26, 2012 at 15:55
  • 1
    The issue with this is that this will always create the leading directories without asking, which may may be unwanted in the case of a typo when you know the directory should exist. See my answer for a solution.
    – Tom Hale
    Mar 18, 2017 at 8:51
25

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.

3
  • 2
    I've tried this same command and everytime I use :W, my screen becomes almost blank. I'll try and remove my previous options and give feedback. Sep 3, 2016 at 14:28
  • Changing write to execute ':write' fixed it for me. May 7, 2021 at 23:35
  • I had to replace the 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
    – Valentin
    Jan 17 at 21:12
9

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
7

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.

7

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
4

I made :saveas! create the directory if missing: https://github.com/henrik/dotfiles/commit/54cc9474b345332cf54cf25b51ddb8a9bd00a0bb

4

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

  • This will not work if your folders have spaces on them (apparently they are not properly escaped or something)
  • Or if you are doing pseudo files.
  • Or if you are sourcing your vimrc.
  • But son, it is short.
8
  • 1
    Never use % 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.
    – ZyX
    Sep 28, 2012 at 12:33
  • 2
    There is 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.
    – ZyX
    Sep 28, 2012 at 12:38
  • And you don’t avoid other troubles I am avoiding in my first code snippet: launching shell one additional time after every vimrc sourcing (supposing you pull in vimrc updates by doing :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).
    – ZyX
    Sep 28, 2012 at 12:44
  • 1
    @ZyX Thanks for your feedback. I don't want to solve problems I don't have. I never use special chars (i.e. spaces) on my folders, so %:p:h does just fine for me. I never source vimrc (I kill and reopen vim instead) and I don't even know what pseudofiles are. redraw! doesn't seem to do anything at all to me. But I like your suggestion of removing execute to make everything shorter. Cheers!
    – kikito
    Sep 28, 2012 at 16:16
  • 1
    It does not matter whether or not you do have special characters, it is the thing you should care about. There are too much problems with % 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.
    – ZyX
    Sep 28, 2012 at 16:27
0

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.

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