I had a real difficulty installing vim plugins on mac. I know for a plugin to be installed it has to be seen by runtimepath. According to vim docs, this is Macintosh: '$VIM:vimfiles, $VIMRUNTIME, $VIM:vimfiles:after' First off, what does $VIM:vimfiles mean?? It is certainly not $VIM/vimfiles, as (/.vim/vimfiles) does not work. So my options are 1) put my plugin in /usr/share/vim/vim73 (my $VIMRUNTIME, which i know to be BAD) 2) find a way to make vim look at my home directory when including plugins.
Mac OS This tutorial was written for MAC OS X Mountain Lion (10.8) but should work with most recent versions of Mac OS. The system used for generating this document had the following applications installed.
I have putting my plugin in: /.vim/plugin.vim /.vim/vimfiles/plugin.vim /.vim/plugin/plugin.vim All to no avail. Can somebody help me out here? You don't need to do anything for Vim to find your plugins and settings. Except actually putting them in the right place. On UNIX derivatives, $VIM refers to the directory where Vim's support files were installed.
On Mac OS X, a UNIX derivative, Vim's default location is /usr/bin and its support files are installed in /usr/share. Don't put your plugins/colorschemes/scripts in /usr/share/vim/vim73. Only default files should be there as they will likely be changed the next time you or Apple updates your install.
On Mac OS X (or any UNIX derivative) you must put your plugins/colorschemes/scripts in a /.vim directory and your custom settings in a /.vimrc file. None of these are there by default: you'll have to create them yourself as well as any needed sub-directories.
Some plugins consist of only one file, pluginname.vim that you should put in /.vim/plugin as in: /.vim/plugin/pluginname.vim If the plugin and your version of Vim are compatible it should work. Check the plugin's page if it needs some activation command or setting.
You'll need to relaunch Vim anyway. Many plugins, though, are composed of many files in many directories like autoload, after, doc You'll have to put the files in their corresponding directories under your /.vim, creating them as needed. Taking as an example: /.vim/autoload/ctrlp/ /.vim/autoload/ctrlp/ctrlp.vim /.vim/doc/ctrlp.txt /.vim/plugin/ctrlp.vim. Once you are OK with the basics of plugin management in Vim you should try. Since this question not specifically about configuring paths in order to have plugins work, an alternative to mucking around with all the path stuff is to just source the specific plugins you want in vim from your.vimrc (assuming it's working) by adding the line:source PATH/TO/FILE.vim.
Vim generally checks for.vimrc right in the home directory /. If it does not exist, try creating it there, and from within it either sourcing the plugin(s) you want as described, or first doing something else you'll notice when starting vim such as:echo your vimrc says hello.