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"gF" command in VIM edit the file whose name is under or after the cursor, and if a number follows the filename, then the cursor is positioned on that line in the file.

This command finds filename if the characters is in 'isfname' options value, and find line number follows the filename string. EX.eval.c @ 20 finds the filename eval.c and the line number 20. But python traceback message, the file line number is following 'line', so the line number couldn't be found.

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "c:\gd\jupyter\doc.py", line 51, in <module>
    print(qqq)

Howto config vim to let 'gF' command understand python traceback messages?

1 Answer 1

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As mentioned in :help gF, Vim has a special case for:

filename line 51

It won't work, here, because the filename is both quoted and followed by a comma so it's really the whole ", line that is causing issues.

But why are you editing a Python traceback to begin with? Can't you use :help :make?

--- EDIT ---

Anyway… having a single use case makes it simpler for you to write your own custom gF than for Vim to have a universal solution that can handle all possible cases.

Here is a quick and dirty way to handle this specific use case:

function! CustomgF()
    " are we in a terminal window?
    if win_getid()->getwininfo()->get(0, {})->get('terminal', 0)

        " if we are, find a suitable line number on this line
        let line = getline('.')->matchstr(', line \zs\d\+')

        if line
            " if we have one, do regular gF, which won't jump
            " to the desired line anyway because Vim can't parse
            " tracebacks properly
            normal! gF

            " but we don't care because we can jump
            " to the found line on our own
            execute line
        else
            " if we don't, do regular gF
            normal! gF
        endif
    else
        " if we aren't, do regular gF
        normal! gF
    endif
endfunction
nnoremap gF <Cmd>call CustomgF()<CR>

The mapping above overrides regular gF globally but it only deviates in behaviour:

  • in terminal windows,
  • and if there is a , line <number> on the current line.
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  • A typical scenario for me is that I might have a terminal window open (:terminal) in which I run Python code, among other things. If I encounter an error, I switch to Terminal-Normal mode with CTRL-W N, move the cursor on the file name and do gF. Unfortunately the line number is ignored, for the reasons you mentioned.
    – gdupras
    Jul 19, 2021 at 16:30
  • Yes, I use :below :term cmd /c % to run Python code in the below terminal window to see complete trace message.
    – Fhope Cc
    Jul 20, 2021 at 9:21
  • 3
    gF-python-traceback is packaged as a plugin here.
    – karel
    Sep 25, 2021 at 5:58

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