author | Mahlon E. Smith <mahlon@martini.nu> |
Wed, 29 Sep 2010 09:11:49 -0700 | |
branch | vim-stuff |
changeset 17 | 54598f9f279c |
parent 10 | a8f9271a7cab |
child 19 | 763cef799c74 |
permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
2 | 1 |
*specky.txt* Last change: $Id$ |
2 |
||
3 |
VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Mahlon E. Smith |
|
4 |
||
5 |
||
6 |
specky! |
|
7 |
||
8 |
A Plugin for testing Ruby code with RSpec -- and more *specky* |
|
9 |
============================================================================== |
|
10 |
CONTENTS *SpeckyContents* |
|
11 |
||
12 |
||
13 |
1) Intro........................................|SpeckyIntro| |
|
14 |
2) Functionality................................|SpeckyFunctionality| |
|
15 |
3) Enabling Specky..............................|SpeckyVimrcExample| |
|
16 |
4) Configuration................................|SpeckyOptions| |
|
3 | 17 |
4.1) Create text banners....................|g:speckyBannerKey| |
18 |
4.2) Cycling quote styles...................|g:speckyQuoteSwitcherKey| |
|
19 |
4.3) Display ruby documentation.............|g:speckyRunRdocKey| |
|
20 |
4.4) Toggle editing between spec and code...|g:speckySpecSwitcherKey| |
|
21 |
4.5) Run specs for the current buffer.......|g:speckyRunSpecKey| |
|
22 |
4.6) Modify the default spec command........|g:speckyRunSpecCmd| |
|
23 |
4.7) Modify the default rdoc command........|g:speckyRunRdocCmd| |
|
6 | 24 |
4.8) Alter new window behavior..............|g:speckyWindowType| |
2 | 25 |
5) Author.......................................|SpeckyAuthor| |
26 |
6) License......................................|SpeckyLicense| |
|
27 |
||
28 |
||
29 |
||
30 |
============================================================================== |
|
31 |
1. INTRO *SpeckyIntro* |
|
32 |
||
33 |
||
34 |
Specky is primarily a small collection of functions to help make behavioral |
|
35 |
testing streamlined and easy when working with ruby and rspec. |
|
36 |
||
37 |
Specky secondarily includes a couple of conveniences to make your everyday |
|
38 |
programming tasks smooooth and pleasurable. |
|
39 |
||
40 |
||
41 |
||
42 |
============================================================================== |
|
43 |
2. FUNCTIONALITY *SpeckyFunctionality* |
|
44 |
||
45 |
||
46 |
Okay then, what does it do? |
|
47 |
||
5 | 48 |
By default? Nothing but syntax highlighting unless you are comfortable using |
49 |
the menus. I decided the easiest way to cherry pick the functionality that |
|
50 |
you'd like was to enable them via key bindings. By doing this, Specky won't |
|
51 |
make assumptions about your current environment, and won't stomp on anything |
|
52 |
you don't want it to. |
|
3 | 53 |
|
54 |
Specky won't do -anything- with your environment until you enable ~ |
|
55 |
the key bindings!! ~ |
|
2 | 56 |
|
57 |
After you've configured your bindings, here are some of the things you can |
|
58 |
now do with a single key stroke: |
|
59 |
> |
|
60 |
- Switch back and forth from code to testing spec |
|
61 |
||
62 |
- Run the spec, with results going to a new, syntax highlighted buffer |
|
63 |
||
64 |
- Jump quickly to spec failures and failure detail |
|
65 |
- 'e' and 'r' to move back and forth on each failed assertion, |
|
66 |
- 'E' to jump details for it. |
|
67 |
- '<C-e>' to "forget" the currently selected failed assertion |
|
68 |
- 'q' to close the spec output buffer. |
|
69 |
||
70 |
- View rdoc of the word under the cursor |
|
71 |
||
72 |
- Dynamically switch string types for the word under the cursor |
|
73 |
(double quoted, quoted, symbol) |
|
74 |
||
3 | 75 |
- Make lovely and quick comment banners for ruby code. |
2 | 76 |
|
5 | 77 |
Specky also includes a "snippets" file that can be used with the Snipmate |
78 |
plugin by Michael Sanders <msanders42+vim@gmail.com>. (Minimum version 0.74.) |
|
79 |
||
80 |
http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=2540 |
|
2 | 81 |
|
82 |
============================================================================== |
|
83 |
3. ENABLING-SPECKY *SpeckyVimrcExample* |
|
84 |
||
85 |
||
86 |
Here's what my config looks like. > |
|
87 |
||
3 | 88 |
let g:speckyBannerKey = "<C-S>b" |
2 | 89 |
let g:speckyQuoteSwitcherKey = "<C-S>'" |
90 |
let g:speckyRunRdocKey = "<C-S>r" |
|
91 |
let g:speckySpecSwitcherKey = "<C-S>x" |
|
92 |
let g:speckyRunSpecKey = "<C-S>s" |
|
93 |
let g:speckyRunSpecCmd = "spec -fs -r loadpath.rb" |
|
94 |
let g:speckyRunRdocCmd = "fri -L -f plain" |
|
6 | 95 |
let g:speckyWindowType = 2 |
2 | 96 |
|
97 |
||
98 |
With these bindings, all specky commands start with <ctrl-s> ("s" for |
|
99 |
specky!), followed by a mnemonic function to run: |
|
100 |
||
3 | 101 |
b ----> Banner creation ~ |
2 | 102 |
' ----> Quote cycling ~ |
103 |
r ----> run Rdoc ~ |
|
104 |
x ----> code and spec eXchange ~ |
|
105 |
s ----> run Spec ~ |
|
106 |
||
107 |
Of course, <ctrl-s> is a "suspend" signal for most terminals, so these |
|
108 |
bindings are meant for a |gui| environment, such as gvim. Your mileage (and |
|
3 | 109 |
tastes) will doubtlessly vary. Do what you will. I won't judge you. |
2 | 110 |
|
111 |
||
112 |
||
113 |
============================================================================== |
|
114 |
4. CONFIGURATION-OPTIONS *SpeckyOptions* |
|
115 |
||
116 |
||
117 |
Here are all of the available configuration options. |
|
118 |
||
3 | 119 |
Please note that you must set binding variables: |
2 | 120 |
|
3 | 121 |
|g:speckyBannerKey| |
2 | 122 |
|g:speckyQuoteSwitcherKey| |
123 |
|g:speckyRunRdocKey| |
|
124 |
|g:speckySpecSwitcherKey| |
|
125 |
|g:speckyRunSpecKey| |
|
126 |
||
3 | 127 |
...in order to enable the respective specky functionality. See |
128 |
|SpeckyVimrcExample| for details. Any other options are entirely optional. |
|
129 |
Put these into your |vimrc|, or wherever else you enjoy storing this kind of |
|
130 |
stuff. |
|
2 | 131 |
|
132 |
||
133 |
||
134 |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
3 | 135 |
4.1 *g:speckyBannerKey* |
136 |
||
137 |
||
138 |
Setting this binding enables comment banner creation. |
|
139 |
||
140 |
This is purely a convenience routine, and a stylistic one at that. I prefer |
|
141 |
large advertising of what "area" of code you are in, along with other |
|
142 |
miscellaneous labels for humans to read. If this isn't how you roll, then by |
|
143 |
all means, don't enable this binding! :) |
|
144 |
||
145 |
As an example -- you can just type: |
|
146 |
||
147 |
instance methods ~ |
|
148 |
||
149 |
Then hit the keystroke. It will magically turn into: > |
|
150 |
||
151 |
######################################################################## |
|
152 |
### I N S T A N C E M E T H O D S |
|
153 |
######################################################################## |
|
154 |
||
155 |
With all those saved extra keystrokes this might provide you per banner over |
|
156 |
the years, your RSI-free hands will thank you. And the total time savings!! |
|
157 |
Oh man, what are you going to DO with all of that extra free time? |
|
158 |
The possibilities are staggering. |
|
159 |
||
160 |
||
161 |
||
162 |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
163 |
4.2 *g:speckyQuoteSwitcherKey* |
|
2 | 164 |
|
165 |
||
166 |
Setting this binding enables quote "style switching". |
|
167 |
||
168 |
If you aren't in ruby mode, this just changes the word under the cursor |
|
169 |
back and forth from double quoting to single quoting. |
|
170 |
||
171 |
string -> "string" -> 'string' -> "string" ... ~ |
|
172 |
||
173 |
In ruby mode, symbols are also put into the rotation. |
|
174 |
||
175 |
"string" -> 'string' -> :string -> "string" ... ~ |
|
176 |
||
3 | 177 |
Note that quote cycling only works with a |word|. |
2 | 178 |
|
179 |
||
180 |
||
181 |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
3 | 182 |
4.3 *g:speckyRunRdocKey* |
2 | 183 |
|
184 |
||
185 |
Setting this enables the display of rdoc documentation for the current |
|
186 |
word under the cursor. For lookups with multiple matches, you can continue |
|
187 |
using this binding to "drill down" to the desired documentation. |
|
188 |
||
189 |
||
190 |
||
191 |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
3 | 192 |
4.4 *g:speckySpecSwitcherKey* |
2 | 193 |
|
194 |
||
195 |
Setting this enables spec to code switching, and visa versa. |
|
196 |
||
197 |
Switching uses path searching instead of reliance on directory structure in |
|
198 |
your project. The idea here is that you'd |:chdir| into your project |
|
199 |
directory. Spec files just need to end in '_spec.rb', which is a common |
|
200 |
convention. |
|
201 |
||
202 |
aRubyClass.rb ---> aRubyClass_spec.rb~ |
|
203 |
||
6 | 204 |
Because it leaves respective buffers open, you can essentially think of this |
205 |
as a quick toggle between code and tests. |
|
2 | 206 |
|
207 |
||
208 |
||
209 |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
3 | 210 |
4.5 *g:speckyRunSpecKey* |
2 | 211 |
|
212 |
||
6 | 213 |
Setting this variable runs "spec" on the current buffer. |
2 | 214 |
|
215 |
All output is sent to a syntax highlighted scratch buffer. This new window is |
|
216 |
re-used for each spec run. You can quickly "jump" to assertion failures and |
|
217 |
their associated details with the following keys: |
|
218 |
||
219 |
e and r ~ |
|
220 |
Move forward and backward through the failed assertions. |
|
221 |
||
222 |
E~ |
|
223 |
While on a failure line, jump to the details of the failure. |
|
224 |
||
225 |
<C-e> ~ |
|
226 |
"Forget" the last found failed assertion, and start over at the |
|
227 |
beginning of the list. (ie, the next 'e' keystroke will select |
|
228 |
error #1.) |
|
229 |
||
230 |
q ~ |
|
231 |
Closes the spec output buffer. |
|
232 |
||
233 |
||
234 |
Normally, you'd only want to perform this keystroke while in a spec file |
|
235 |
buffer. If specky thinks you are in code, rather than a buffer (as indicated |
|
236 |
by the lack of a "_spec.rb" file naming convention) then it will attempt to |
|
237 |
switch to the spec before running the command. |
|
238 |
||
239 |
||
240 |
||
241 |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
3 | 242 |
4.6 *g:speckyRunSpecCmd* |
2 | 243 |
|
244 |
||
245 |
This is the program, with flags, that the current file is sent to when |
|
246 |
executing the |g:speckyRunSpecKey| keybinding. |
|
247 |
||
248 |
A common addition is to include an "-r" flag for sucking in local libraries |
|
249 |
necessary for testing your project. The spec "plain" output format is |
|
250 |
supported too, though less useful. |
|
251 |
||
252 |
Default: ~ |
|
253 |
spec -fs |
|
254 |
||
255 |
||
256 |
||
257 |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
3 | 258 |
4.7 *g:speckyRunRdocCmd* |
2 | 259 |
|
260 |
||
261 |
If you prefer an rdoc display program other than "ri", you can set it |
|
6 | 262 |
with this variable. "fri -L -f plain" is always a nice choice, for example. |
2 | 263 |
|
264 |
Default: ~ |
|
265 |
ri |
|
266 |
||
267 |
||
268 |
||
269 |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
6 | 270 |
4.8 *g:speckyWindowType* |
2 | 271 |
|
272 |
||
6 | 273 |
For both spec and rdoc commands, this variable controls the behavior of the |
274 |
newly generated window. |
|
2 | 275 |
|
6 | 276 |
Default: ~ |
277 |
0 |
|
278 |
||
279 |
0 ~ |
|
280 |
Create a new tabbed window |
|
281 |
1 ~ |
|
282 |
Split the current window horizontally |
|
283 |
2 ~ |
|
284 |
Split the current window vertically |
|
2 | 285 |
|
286 |
||
287 |
============================================================================== |
|
288 |
5. AUTHOR *SpeckyAuthor* |
|
289 |
||
290 |
||
291 |
Specky was written by Mahlon E. Smith. |
|
292 |
||
293 |
mahlon@martini.nu ~ |
|
294 |
http://www.martini.nu/ |
|
295 |
||
296 |
||
297 |
||
298 |
============================================================================== |
|
299 |
6. LICENSE *SpeckyLicense* |
|
300 |
||
301 |
||
302 |
Specky is distributed under the BSD license. |
|
303 |
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php |
|
304 |
> |
|
10
a8f9271a7cab
* Remove committed keyword expansions.
Mahlon E. Smith <mahlon@martini.nu>
parents:
6
diff
changeset
|
305 |
Copyright (c) 2008-2009, Mahlon E. Smith <mahlon@martini.nu> |
2 | 306 |
All rights reserved. |
307 |
||
308 |
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without |
|
309 |
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are |
|
310 |
met: |
|
311 |
||
312 |
* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright |
|
313 |
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. |
|
314 |
||
315 |
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright |
|
316 |
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the |
|
317 |
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. |
|
318 |
||
319 |
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS |
|
320 |
"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT |
|
321 |
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR |
|
322 |
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT |
|
323 |
OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, |
|
324 |
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED |
|
325 |
TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR |
|
326 |
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF |
|
327 |
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING |
|
328 |
NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS |
|
329 |
SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
|
330 |
||
331 |
||
332 |
||
333 |
vim: set noet nosta sw=4 ts=4 ft=help : |