created 2003 · complexity intermediate · author Stephen Thomas, Ross Presser, Neil Cerruti · version 6.0
Inform is an Interactive Fiction authoring language. Its header files often use a '.h' extension, which causes Vim to think they are C files, or do not have any extension at all, leaving Vim unable to determine what kind of file they are. This is irritating to Inform developers using Vim with syntax highlighting.
The solution is to use a custom filetype.vim and 'scripts.vim'.
In filetype.vim add:
au BufNewFile,BufRead *.h call FTCheck_inform()
and after augroup END
add
" function to detect inform code (any extension) fun! FTCheck_inform() if getline(1) =~ "^!" setfiletype inform elseif getline(2) =~ "^!" setfiletype inform else let s:colnum = col('.') let s:linenum = line('.') call cursor(500, 1) if search('\[\(\s*\I\i*\)*\s*;', 'bW') > 0 setfiletype inform endif call cursor(s:linenum, s:colnum) endif endfun
On loading a file with a '.h' extension, a function is called to examine the file for certain Inform-specific constructs. If it finds any, it sets the filetype as inform, otherwise it leaves the filetype unset, allowing the global filetype.vim to determine the filetype.
For files with no extension, create a '$HOME/.vim/scripts.vim':
" local scripts.vim gets called when " all autocommands have failed to identify file type, " but before global scripts.vim " call FTCheck_inform()
See also the site http://www.stephenthomas.uklinux.net/informvim