I have MacVim installed and I am trying to set it up as the editor for Git (version control), but I can't run 'mvim' from the command line as it isn't recognised. How do I setup mvim so I can run it from Terminal?
There should be a script named mvim in the root of the .bz2 file. Copy this somewhere into your $PATH ( /usr/local/bin would be good ) and you should be sorted.
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9
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2A year ago that was what you got when you downloaded MacVim. Now it's a.tbz file, but the script is still there. – Gordon Robertson Mar 9 '11 at 10:39
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5You can locate the file by using find from your root directory.
sudo find . -name mvim
Mine was in /Applications/MacVim-snapshot-64/mvim. – tltjr Aug 26 '12 at 21:32 -
16Since mvim is simply a shell script, you can download it directly from the MacVim source at GitHub here: raw.github.com/b4winckler/macvim/master/src/MacVim/mvim – Brad Parks Sep 26 '12 at 19:43
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1
I don't think I'd to add anything to the path, did
brew install macvim
mvim -v
should then open macvim in the terminal, you can also go ahead and alias that
alias vim='mvim -v'
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38Anyone reading this today using homebrew you'll have to run
brew linkapps
after installing macvim. – Aaron Lake Sep 29 '11 at 18:20 -
1The '-v' option works if you've installed from source or from download as well as shown in other answers. – Bryan Head Oct 17 '12 at 1:37
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6
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If running
brew linkapps
didn't help, also runbrew doctor
and watch for macvim-related warning messages - you may need to runbrew link --overwrite macvim
if suggested. – Art Jul 11 '16 at 12:42 -
If you go the brew route, the best way to install would be:
brew install macvim --with-override-system-vim
That will provide mvim, vim, vi, view, etc. in /usr/local/bin (all symlinked to the copy in the Cellar). This also removes the need to create any aliases and also changes your vi, vim, etc. to all use the same Vim distribution as your MacVim.
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Whilst the
--override-system-vim
did create some of the symlinks for me, it failed to override/usr/bin/vim
and/usr/bin/vi
and so I still had to manuallyalias
these in my.profile
. – dukedave Feb 8 '12 at 18:49 -
12Dave, that sounds like a PATH problem, /usr/local/bin needs to be first in your PATH. This answer, pointing at brew, should be the number one answer, as it gets you everything you need. – Jason Yanowitz Feb 16 '12 at 0:03
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1Oh man. I've been searching for a solution to this for ages and your tip worked a treat. Thanks man – djhworld Jul 28 '12 at 21:37
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3fyi running
brew doctor
should notify you of any PATH or configuration issues for brew. – Andrew Aug 2 '12 at 15:43
In addition, if you want to use MacVim (or GVim) as $VISUAL
or $EDITOR
, you should be aware that by default MacVim will fork a new process from the parent, resulting in the MacVim return value not reaching the parent process. This may confuse other applications, but Git seems to check the status of a temporary commit message file, which bypasses this limitation. In general, it is a good practice to export VISUAL='mvim -f'
to ensure MacVim will not fork a new process when called, which should give you what you want when using it with your shell environment.
If you already have macVim installed: /Applications/MacVim.app/Contents/MacOS/Vim -g
will give you macVim GUI.
just add an alias.
i use gvim
because that is what i use on linux for gnome-vim.
alias gvim='/Applications/MacVim.app/Contents/MacOS/Vim -g'
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1Also using
alias vim=/Applications/MacVim.app/Contents/MacOS/Vim
is a great idea. Then you don't need to install MacVim via either MacPorts or Homebrew to update Vim in your terminal, you can just install the release packages from the GitHub release page. – w0rp Apr 19 '17 at 8:59
If you have homeBrew installed, this is all you have to do:
brew install macvim
brew linkapps
Then type mvim
in your terminal to run MacVim.
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Well that's how to do it with a fresh installation, I think he's asking how to make an alias when it's already installed. – JackHasaKeyboard May 9 '16 at 3:27
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1Warning:
brew linkapps
has been deprecated and will eventually be removed! – Mark Feb 13 '17 at 18:41
Assume MacVim is installed in the Application folder.
Instead of adding MacVim path to your environment, create a link by typing this in terminal:
sudo ln -s /Applications/MacVim.app/Contents/bin/mvim /usr/local/bin/mvim
Then, open a new terminal window/tab and type mvim
.
Here's what I did:
After building Macvim I copied mvim to one of my $PATH destinations (In this case I chose /usr/local/bin)
cp -v [MacVim_source_folder]/src/MacVim/mvim /usr/local/bin
Then when you invoke mvim it is now recognised but there is an annoying thing. It opens the visual MacVim window, not the one in terminal. To do that, you have to invoke
mvim -v
To make sure every time you call mvim you don't have to remember to add the '-v' you can create an alias:
alias mvim='mvim -v'
However, this alias will only persist for this session of the Terminal. To have this alias executed every time you open a Terminal window, you have to include it in your .profile The .profile should be in your home directory. If it's not, create it.
cd ~
mvim -v .profile
include the alias command in there and save it.
That's it.
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Tried this but it didn't work for me. VIM_APP_DIR=~/Downloads/MacVim-snapshot-64/MacVim.app $ mvim -v x.x Sorry, cannot find MacVim.app. Try setting the VIM_APP_DIR environment variable to the directory containing MacVim.app. – Michael Durrant Mar 6 '12 at 16:09
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This works when you build MacVim from source, github.com/macvim-dev/macvim/blob/master/README_mac.txt, thanks @douglas – mbenegas Nov 4 '15 at 17:45
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With this
-v
flag changing the font doesn't work.-v
enables vi mode. Can imagine that other things don't work in this mode, besides setting a custom font. – Ixx Apr 1 '18 at 11:47
I'm adding Bard Park's comment here for that was the real answer for me:
Since mvim is simply a shell script, you can download it directly from the MacVim source at GitHub here: http://raw.github.com/b4winckler/macvim/master/src/MacVim/mvim
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/usr/local/bin was in my PATH, but the bin folder was absent. I had trouble working directly in /usr/local, (probably a permissions issue), so I created a bin directory in my Documents folder. There I created an mvim file, into which I copied the contents of Bard Park's link. I dragged the bin folder with the mvim script to /usr/local. I was asked for my password, then allowed to place the mvim script where I wanted it. But the script didn't run yet. I entered: sudo chmod 755 mvim to give the script execute permissions. Now from the command line when I type mvim filename, MacVim launches. – Jerry Frost Nov 6 '15 at 18:50
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In order to drag the bin folder into /usr/local, first I entered: open . from the command line in /usr/local. Doing so brings up the finder GUI for that file location. – Jerry Frost Nov 6 '15 at 19:39
I'd seriously recommend installing MacVim via MacPorts (sudo port install MacVim
).
When installed, MacPorts automatically updates your profile to include /opt/local/bin in your path, and so when mvim is installed as /opt/local/bin/mvim during the install of MacVim you'll find it ready to use straight away.
When you install the MacVim port the MacVim.app bundle is installed in /Applications/MacPorts for you too.
A good thing about going the MacPorts route is that you'll also be able to install git too (sudo port install git-core
) and many many other ports. Highly recommended.
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1Thanks I'll give this a go. I installed MacVim and Git using the UI installers. But its looking like Macports is the way to go. – Fred Jan 13 '10 at 18:44
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56Don't use mac port versions unless you absolutely need to. It installs all the dependency libraries ignoring darwin native ones. This can i.e. replace your perl 5.10 with 5.8 in path etc. Check homebrew (brew) system instead. – Slava Nadvorny May 26 '10 at 14:03
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3@SlavaNadvorny maybe true when this was written. I currently have a development environment with MacVim, scipy, haskell, multiple versions of erlang, python and perl all functioning properly with macports. The same was not possible with brew (at this time this was written). I do like brew's non-sudo install and wished it worked in this case. – Barry Mar 5 '12 at 16:08
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This works for me:
λ brew link --overwrite macvim
Linking /usr/local/Cellar/macvim/8.0-146_1... 12 symlinks created
For Mac .app
bundles, you should install them via cask, if available, as using symlinks can cause issues. You may even get the following warning if you brew linkapps
:
Unfortunately
brew linkapps
cannot behave nicely with e.g. Spotlight using either aliases or symlinks and Homebrew formulae do not build "proper".app
bundles that can be relocated. Instead, please consider usingbrew cask
and migrate formulae using.app
s to casks.
For MacVim, you can install with:
brew cask install macvim
You should then be able to launch MacVim like you do any other macOS app, including mvim
or open -a MacVim
from a terminal session.
vim
from the command-line. – pavium Jan 13 '10 at 11:17echo $PATH
") and add the folder to the MacVim executable to it if it's not there already (use "export PATH=$PATH:path/to/folder
"). Mind the$
signs, they are important! – laura Jan 13 '10 at 11:18