NAME Vim::Tag - Generate perl tags for vim VERSION version 1.110690 SYNOPSIS $ ptags --use ~/code/coderepos -o ~/.ptags In ".vimrc": set tags+=~/.ptags then this works in vim: :ta Foo::Bar :ta my_subroutine bash completion: cpanm Bash::Completion::Plugins::VimTag alias vit='vi -t' then you can do: $ vit Foo::Bar $ vit my_subroutine Custom tag generation package Foo::Bar; $::PTAGS && $::PTAGS->add_tag($tag, $filename, $line); DESCRIPTION Manage tags for perl code in vim, with ideas on integrating tags with the bash programmable completion project. See the synopsis. You should subclass this class to use it in your "ptags"-generating application. It could be as simple as that: #!/usr/bin/env perl use warnings; use strict; use base qw(Vim::Tag); main->new->run; And if you want just that, there's the "ptags" program. But it is more interesting to extend this with custom aliases and to have your modules generate custom tags and so on. The documentation on those features is a bit sparse at the moment, but take a look in this distribution's "examples/" directory. METHODS add_tag Takes a tag name, a filename and a 'search' argument that can either be a line number which caused the tag, or a vim search pattern which will jump to the tag. It will add the tag to the "tags" hash. add_SUPER_tags Adds tags to find a class' superclass, generated if "--use" is in effect. add_yaml_marshall_tags Adds tags for YAML::Marshall serialization handlers. delete_tags_by_pattern Takes a pattern and deletes all tags that match this pattern. It's not used directly in this class or in "ptags", but if you write a custom tags generator you might want to munge the results. determine_libs Determines which directories should be searched. This includes all of @INC and anything set via "--libs". We also weed out nested directories. For example, @INC might contain /.../perl-5.12.2/lib/5.12.2/darwin-2level /.../perl-5.12.2/lib/5.12.2 Then we don't want the first one, but we do want the second one. We go through library directories in @INC order. I assume that custom directories will be "unshift()"-tacked onto @INC so they come first - this happens with "use lib", for example. That means that the main perl libraries will come last. By going through the libraries in reverse order, a local version of a module will take precedence over a module that's installed system-wide. This is useful if you have a module both under development in your $PROJROOT as well as installed system-wide; in this case you most likely want tags to point to the locally installed version. finalize Finalizes things just before the tags are written. Here we just very specifically avoid "END{}" processing when Test::Base has been loaded. generate_tags Goes through all files in the directories set in "determine_libs()" and calls "process_pm_file()" for ".pm" files or "process_pod_file()" for ".pod" files. The directories "bin", "t", "blib" and "inc" (used by Module::Install) are pruned. make_package_tag Makes a tag for a given package. make_tag_aliases Takes a list of regex/replace pairs and applies each pair to each tag name. If the name has been changed by the "s///" operation, a new tag is recorded. It's not used directly in this class or in "ptags", but if you write a custom tags generator you might want to munge the results. For example, you might want to make alias tags for long package names. Instead of "My::Very::Long::Package::Namespace::*" you might like to have "mvlpn::*" tags. process_pm_file Processes the given ".pm" file. process_pod_file Processes the given ".pod" file. run The main method that calls the other methods to do its work. This is the method your tag generator - for example, "ptags" - will call. setup_fake_package If you use "--use" and the packages load modules which can't be loaded easily in the context of Vim::Tag or which have some side-effects, you can act as though that module has already been loaded. This method takes a list of package names and changes @INC for each one. It's not used directly in this class or in "ptags", but if you write a custom tags generator you might need to use it. write_tags Writes the generated tags to the file determined by "--out" in a format "vim" can understand. PLANS * "ptags" only has one global tags file and generates everything every time it is run. This is especially a problem if you have various perl installations, for example, using "perlbrew": Every time you switch between perl installations you'd have to re-run "ptags" to keep it up-to-date. SEE ALSO Bash::Completion::Plugins::VimTag INSTALLATION See perlmodinstall for information and options on installing Perl modules. BUGS AND LIMITATIONS No bugs have been reported. Please report any bugs or feature requests through the web interface at . AVAILABILITY The latest version of this module is available from the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN). Visit to find a CPAN site near you, or see . The development version lives at and may be cloned from . Instead of sending patches, please fork this project using the standard git and github infrastructure. AUTHOR Marcel Gruenauer COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2008 by Marcel Gruenauer. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.