#!/bin/sh # # This shell script passes all its arguments to the binary inside the # MacVim.app application bundle. If you make links to this script as view, # gvim, etc., then it will peek at the name used to call it and set options # appropriately. # # Based on a script by Wout Mertens and suggestions from Laurent Bihanic. This # version is the fault of Benji Fisher, 16 May 2005 (with modifications by Nico # Weber and Bjorn Winckler, Aug 13 2007). # First, check "All the Usual Suspects" for the location of the Vim.app bundle. # You can short-circuit this by setting the VIM_APP_DIR environment variable # or by un-commenting and editing the following line: # VIM_APP_DIR=/Applications if [ -z "$VIM_APP_DIR" ] then myDir="`dirname "$0"`" myAppDir="$myDir/../Applications" suspects=( /Applications ~/Applications /Applications/vim ~/Applications/vim $myDir $myDir/vim $myAppDir $myAppDir/vim /Applications/Utilities /Applications/Utilities/vim ) for i in ${suspects[@]}; do if [ -x "$i/MacVim.app" ]; then VIM_APP_DIR="$i" break fi done fi if [ -z "$VIM_APP_DIR" ] then echo "Sorry, cannot find MacVim.app. Try setting the VIM_APP_DIR environment variable to the directory containing MacVim.app." exit 1 fi binary="$VIM_APP_DIR/MacVim.app/Contents/MacOS/Vim" # Next, peek at the name used to invoke this script, and set options # accordingly. name="`basename "$0"`" gui= opts= # GUI mode, implies forking case "$name" in m*|g*|rm*|rg*) gui=true ;; esac # Logged in over SSH? No gui. if [ -n "${SSH_CONNECTION}" ]; then gui= fi # Restricted mode case "$name" in r*) opts="$opts -Z";; esac # vimdiff, view, and ex mode case "$name" in *vimdiff) opts="$opts -dO" ;; *view) opts="$opts -R" ;; *ex) opts="$opts -e" ;; esac # Last step: fire up vim. # The program should fork by default when started in GUI mode, but it does # not; we work around this when this script is invoked as "gvim" or "rgview" # etc., but not when it is invoked as "vim -g". if [ "$gui" ]; then # Note: this isn't perfect, because any error output goes to the # terminal instead of the console log. # But if you use open instead, you will need to fully qualify the # path names for any filenames you specify, which is hard. exec "$binary" -g $opts ${1:+"$@"} else exec "$binary" $opts ${1:+"$@"} fi