Reputation: 2542
I'm working with a C++ project and trying to configure it to use syntastic. In my project I have a nested directory structure of header files (The actual nested structure is much worse, this is an example).
--libs
|---dir1
|---foo1.h
|---dir2
|---foo2.h
|---foo3.h
|---dir3
|---foo4.h
I have included the lib files in my .vimrc file using:
let g:syntastic_cpp_include_dirs = [ 'libs/']
I assumed this would take all the header files recursively, but it doesn't. In the code, syntastic complains with the error 'no such file or directory found'.
When I explicitly change the variable to refer to a specific directory:
let g:syntastic_cpp_include_dirs = [ 'libs/dir2/dir3/']
it works.
My questions:
EDIT:
I didn't mention that in my .vimrc, the following options are present for syntastic:
let g:syntastic_check_on_open=1
let g:syntastic_enable_signs=1
let g:syntastic_cpp_include_dirs = ['libs/dir2/dir3', 'libs/dir2 ]
let g:syntastic_cpp_check_header = 1
let g:syntastic_cpp_remove_include_errors = 1
Upvotes: 20
Views: 15409
Reputation: 43
For anyone looking for a quick answer in the future, try this in your root project directory:
find . -type f -regex '.*\.h\(pp\)?$' |\
sed -E 's|/[a-zA-Z0-9_-]*.h(pp)?$||' |\
sed 's|^|-I|' |\
sort | uniq > .syntastic_cpp_config
This will recursively find the directory of every file ending in .h or .hpp from the current working directory, append an -I
in front, and output it to a file called .syntastic_cpp_config
.
Also, as stated by other answers, make sure to add this to your .vimrc!
let g:syntastic_cpp_config_file = .syntastic_cpp_config
let g:syntastic_cpp_check_header = 1
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1343
You can include all the directories to be searched for header files per project in the project root directory in a file .syntastic_cpp_config
. The format for doing so would the same as providing the -I
directives to the compiler.
For your case it means:
.syntastic_cpp_config
under sources
(assuming that's where your code is and sources
is at a same depth level in the directory hierarchy as libs
).Put the following lines in it:
-Ilibs/dir1
-Ilibs/dir2
-Ilibs/dir2/dir3
Note the the flags are 1 per line.
.vimrc
.You can have a different file to hold this custom configuration per project, specified by the .vimrc
global variable g:syntastic_cpp_config_file
, eg
let g:syntastic_cpp_config_file = '.my_custom_include_file_for_syntastic'
Syntastic will check each source directory and upwards until it finds this file and then use it for producing its output.
See the Syntastic wiki page, Old link for more details.
Upvotes: 36
Reputation: 186
I've had the same question with little luck. However, I've found that if I use the quotation mark style header includes, syntactic will appropriately check the folders and not issue warnings. For example, if you're working on foo2.cpp,
#include "dir3/foo4.h"
#include "../dir1/foo1.h"
Save bracket includes for standard libs and any libs you feel like hardcoding into vim.
Upvotes: 0