greduan
greduan

Reputation: 4938

VimL: Checking if function exists

right now I'm cleaning up my .vimrc file to make sure it's compatible on most systems.

In my statusline I use a function that another plugin sets, the GitBranchInfoString() function introduced by this plugin.

What I wanna do is check if this function is set, and only then add it to the statusline. It would be in it's own line so I just need to check for it.

What would be the simplest way to accomplish this?

Thanks for all your help!

EDIT:

I have the following:

if exists('*GitBranchInfoString')
    let &stl.='%{GitBranchInfoString()}'
endif

Upvotes: 29

Views: 12724

Answers (3)

bergercookie
bergercookie

Reputation: 2790

Just as an alternative you may also use a regexp to decide if the plugin at hand is in your runtimepath:

if &rtp =~ 'plugin-name'
    ...
endif

This has the advantage that it works with plugins that only have vimscript code in the autoload directory, which in turn can't be detected when .vimrc is initially parsed since the autoload snippets are loaded at the time of a function call.

Upvotes: 9

user3751385
user3751385

Reputation: 4239

The currently selected answer doesn't work for me (using Vim 7.4 / Ubuntu). I believe that's because:

.vimrc is sourced before any plugins are loaded

As @ZyX noted this in a comment.

My preferred method is just to check for the existence of the plugin file. I find this cleaner than writing a separate function in an external file.

if !empty(glob("path/to/plugin.vim"))
   echo "File exists."
endif

Upvotes: 7

ZyX
ZyX

Reputation: 53674

Use

if exists("*GitBranchInfoString")
    " do stuff here
endif

Upvotes: 42

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