Go (golang) support for Vim, which comes with pre-defined sensible settings (like auto gofmt on save), with autocomplete, snippet support, improved syntax highlighting, go toolchain commands, and more. If needed vim-go installs all necessary binaries for providing seamless Vim integration with current commands. It's highly customizable and each individual feature can be disabled/enabled easily.
- Improved Syntax highlighting with items such as Functions, Operators, Methods.
- Auto completion support via
gocode
- Better
gofmt
on save, which keeps cursor position and doesn't break your undo history - Go to symbol/declaration with
:GoDef
- Look up documentation with
:GoDoc
inside Vim or open it in browser - Automatically import packages via
:GoImport
or plug it into autosave - Compile your package with
:GoBuild
, install it with:GoInstall
or test them with:GoTest
(also supports running single tests via:GoTestFunc
) - Quickly execute your current file/files with
:GoRun
- Automatic
GOPATH
detection based on the directory structure (i.e.gb
projects,godep
vendored projects) - Change or display
GOPATH
with:GoPath
- Create a coverage profile and display annotated source code to see which
functions are covered with
:GoCoverage
- Call
gometalinter
with:GoMetaLinter
, which invokes all possible linters (golint, vet, errcheck, deadcode, etc..) and shows the warnings/errors - Lint your code with
:GoLint
- Run your code through
:GoVet
to catch static errors - Advanced source analysis tools utilizing guru, such as
:GoImplements
,:GoCallees
, and:GoReferrers
- Precise type-safe renaming of identifiers with
:GoRename
- List all source files and dependencies
- Unchecked error checking with
:GoErrCheck
- Integrated and improved snippets, supporting
ultisnips
orneosnippet
- Share your current code to play.golang.org with
:GoPlay
- On-the-fly type information about the word under the cursor. Plug it into your custom vim function.
- Go asm formatting on save
- Tagbar support to show tags of the source code in a sidebar with
gotags
- Custom vim text objects such as
a function
orinner function
list. - Jump to function or type declarations with
:GoDecls
or:GoDeclsDir
- Vim 8.0 support. Async execution for most commands, various underlying improvements.
- NeoVim support (beta). Async execution for some commands.
- Alternate between implementation and test code with
:GoAlternate
Checkout the official tutorial that goes literally over all features and shows many tips and tricks. It shows how to install vim-go and explains many unknown use cases. Recommended for beginners as well as advanced users: https://github.com/fatih/vim-go-tutorial
Master branch is supposed to be a development branch. So stuff here can break and change. Please try use always the latest release
Vim-go follows the standard runtime path structure, so I highly recommend to use a common and well known plugin manager to install vim-go. Do not use vim-go with other Go oriented vim plugins. For Pathogen just clone the repo. For other plugin managers add the appropriate lines and execute the plugin's install command.
- Pathogen
git clone https://github.com/fatih/vim-go.git ~/.vim/bundle/vim-go
- vim-plug
Plug 'fatih/vim-go'
- NeoBundle
NeoBundle 'fatih/vim-go'
- Vundle
Plugin 'fatih/vim-go'
- Vim packages (since Vim 7.4.1528)
git clone https://github.com/fatih/vim-go.git ~/.vim/pack/plugins/start/vim-go
Please be sure all necessary binaries are installed (such as gocode
, godef
,
goimports
, etc.). You can easily install them with the included
:GoInstallBinaries
command. If invoked, all necessary binaries will be
automatically downloaded and installed to your $GOBIN
environment (if not set
it will use $GOPATH/bin
). Note that this command requires git
for fetching
the individual Go packages. Additionally, use :GoUpdateBinaries
to update the
installed binaries.
- Autocompletion is enabled by default via
<C-x><C-o>
. To get real-time completion (completion by type) install: neocomplete for Vim or deoplete and deoplete-go for NeoVim or SimpleAutoCmplPop - To display source code tag information on a sidebar install tagbar.
- For snippet features install: neosnippet or ultisnips.
- Screenshot color scheme is a slightly modified molokai: fatih/molokai.
- For a better documentation viewer checkout: go-explorer.
Many of the plugin's features are enabled by default. There are no
additional settings needed. All usages and commands are listed in
doc/vim-go.txt
. Note that help tags needs to be populated. Check your plugin
manager settings to generate the documentation (some do it automatically).
After that just open the help page to see all commands:
:help vim-go
vim-go has several <Plug>
mappings which can be used to create custom
mappings. Unless otherwise specified, none of these mappings are enabled
by default. Here some examples you might find useful:
Run commands such as go run
for the current file with <leader>r
or go build
and go test
for the current package with <leader>b
and <leader>t
respectively. Display beautifully annotated source code to see which functions
are covered with <leader>c
.
au FileType go nmap <leader>r <Plug>(go-run)
au FileType go nmap <leader>b <Plug>(go-build)
au FileType go nmap <leader>t <Plug>(go-test)
au FileType go nmap <leader>c <Plug>(go-coverage)
By default the mapping gd
is enabled, which opens the target identifier in
current buffer. You can also open the definition/declaration, in a new vertical,
horizontal, or tab, for the word under your cursor:
au FileType go nmap <Leader>ds <Plug>(go-def-split)
au FileType go nmap <Leader>dv <Plug>(go-def-vertical)
au FileType go nmap <Leader>dt <Plug>(go-def-tab)
Open the relevant Godoc for the word under the cursor with <leader>gd
or open
it vertically with <leader>gv
au FileType go nmap <Leader>gd <Plug>(go-doc)
au FileType go nmap <Leader>gv <Plug>(go-doc-vertical)
Or open the Godoc in browser
au FileType go nmap <Leader>gb <Plug>(go-doc-browser)
Show a list of interfaces which is implemented by the type under your cursor
with <leader>s
au FileType go nmap <Leader>s <Plug>(go-implements)
Show type info for the word under your cursor with <leader>i
(useful if you
have disabled auto showing type info via g:go_auto_type_info
)
au FileType go nmap <Leader>i <Plug>(go-info)
Rename the identifier under the cursor to a new name
au FileType go nmap <Leader>e <Plug>(go-rename)
More <Plug>
mappings can be seen with :he go-mappings
. Also these are just
recommendations, you are free to create more advanced mappings or functions
based on :he go-commands
.
Below are some settings you might find useful. For the full list see :he go-settings
.
By default syntax-highlighting for Functions, Methods and Structs is disabled. To change it:
let g:go_highlight_functions = 1
let g:go_highlight_methods = 1
let g:go_highlight_fields = 1
let g:go_highlight_types = 1
let g:go_highlight_operators = 1
let g:go_highlight_build_constraints = 1
Enable goimports to automatically insert import paths instead of gofmt:
let g:go_fmt_command = "goimports"
By default vim-go shows errors for the fmt command, to disable it:
let g:go_fmt_fail_silently = 1
Disable auto fmt on save:
let g:go_fmt_autosave = 0
Disable opening browser after posting your snippet to play.golang.org
:
let g:go_play_open_browser = 0
By default when :GoInstallBinaries
is called, the binaries are installed to
$GOBIN
or $GOPATH/bin
. To change it:
let g:go_bin_path = expand("~/.gotools")
let g:go_bin_path = "/home/fatih/.mypath" "or give absolute path
Disable updating dependencies when installing/updating binaries:
let g:go_get_update = 0
Note: Neovim currently is not a first class citizen for vim-go. You are free to open bug, however I'm not using Neovim so it's hard for me to test it. vim-go might not work well as good as in Vim. I'm happy to accept pull requests or very detailed bug reports. If you're interested to improve the state of Neovim in vim-go you're always welcome!
Run :GoRun
in a new tab, horizontal split or vertical split terminal
au FileType go nmap <leader>rt <Plug>(go-run-tab)
au FileType go nmap <Leader>rs <Plug>(go-run-split)
au FileType go nmap <Leader>rv <Plug>(go-run-vertical)
By default new terminals are opened in a vertical split. To change it
let g:go_term_mode = "split"
By default the testing commands run asynchronously in the background and
display results with go#jobcontrol#Statusline()
. To make them run in a new
terminal
let g:go_term_enabled = 1
Sometimes when using both vim-go
and syntastic
Vim will start lagging while
saving and opening files. The following fixes this:
let g:syntastic_go_checkers = ['golint', 'govet', 'errcheck']
let g:syntastic_mode_map = { 'mode': 'active', 'passive_filetypes': ['go'] }
Another issue with vim-go
and syntastic
is that the location list window
that contains the output of commands such as :GoBuild
and :GoTest
might not appear.
To resolve this:
let g:go_list_type = "quickfix"
Check out the Wiki page for more information. It includes Screencasts, an FAQ section, and many other various pieces of information.
vim-go supports now test files. Please check autoload
folder for examples. If
you add a new feature be sure you also include the _test.vim
file next to the
script. Test functions should be starting with Test_
, example:
function Test_run_fmt()
call assert_equal(expected, actual)
...
endfunction
You can locally test it by running:
make
This will run all tests and print either PASS
or FAIL
to indicate the final
status of all tests.
Additionally, each new pull request will trigger a new Travis-ci job.
People have asked for this for a long time, now you can be a fully supporter by being a patron!
By being a patron, you are enabling vim-go to grow and mature, helping me to invest in bug fixes, new documentation, and improving both current and future features. It's completely optional and is just a direct way to support Vim-go's ongoing development. Thanks!
- Go Authors for official vim plugins
- Gocode, Godef, Golint, Guru, Goimports, Gotags, Errcheck projects and authors of those projects.
- Other vim-plugins, thanks for inspiration (vim-golang, go.vim, vim-gocode, vim-godef)
- Contributors of vim-go
The BSD 3-Clause License - see LICENSE
for more details