One Paragraph of project description goes here
These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development and testing purposes. See deployment for notes on how to deploy the project on a live system.
If you work across many computers (and even otherwise!), it's a good idea to keep a copy of your setup on the cloud, preferably in a git repository, and clone it on another machine when you need.
Thus, you should keep the .vim directory along with your .vimrc version-controlled.
But when you have plugins installed inside .vim/bundle (if you use pathogen), or inside .vim/pack (if you use Vim 8's packages), keeping a copy where you want to be able to update the plugins (individual git repositories), as well as your vim-configuration as a whole, requires you to use git submodules.
Initialize a git repository inside your .vim directory, add everything (including the vimrc), commit and push to a GitHub/BitBucket/GitLab repository:
cd ~/.vim
| package main | |
| import ( | |
| "crypto/rand" | |
| "encoding/base64" | |
| "fmt" | |
| "io" | |
| "math/big" | |
| ) |
| #!/bin/sh | |
| VERSION="1.5.8" | |
| BUILD="betable1" | |
| set -e -x | |
| DIRNAME="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)" | |
| OLDESTPWD="$PWD" |
| # Run this in a path you don't care about, things may get deleted! | |
| VERSION="4.1.1" | |
| BUILD="betable1" | |
| set -e -x | |
| ORIGPWD="$(pwd)" | |
| cd "$(mktemp -d)" | |
| trap "rm -rf \"$PWD\"" EXIT INT QUIT TERM |