![]() If you know Objective-C (I don't) then you may want to have a look around the codebase. A way to set a default opening directory - Right now we need to open it and immediately open a new project.A documented or easy way to add plugins - Right now prior knowledge of Vim is assumed.Being able to make the app full screen - This is fairly common functionality across most OS X apps at this point.Being able to open the app from the command line - I tried a few different methods but couldn't get my current path passed in correctly.I don't know if Tae Won Ha will ever read this, but if he does, first of all hi and thank you! and secondly, here are some things I would love to see implemented at some stage This is maybe a silly project to test with, but by pressing CMD+Shift+O I was able to get into Quick Open which allows me to start typing filenames in a fuzzy way and when I tested it on a large rails project it works great. It noticed I was using Python and has applied syntax highlighting correctly, I can also see just the two files that are in this project (see the following image) Project view of Vimr The first thing I wanted to do is open a project I have been working on to get a feel for how it acts on a project. To do this I pressed CMD+O.Įverything looks good. The sidebar file browser defaults to your home directory, which makes sense, I looked to see if I can configure this and at the moment you don't seem to be able to. The very first time I opened up VimR my immediate first impression was "Yes! They use Solarised" which is the colour scheme that I use in my normal vimmings! Of course then I realised that this isn't another copy of Vim, this *is* Vim, so it is reading my vimrc - which means no settings to change :-) ![]()
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