This plugin uses clang for accurately completing C and C++ code.
You need Vim 7.3 or higher, compiled with python support and ideally, with the conceal feature.
Just put the files in ~/.vim/
git clone https://github.com/xavierd/clang_complete.git /tmp/clang_complete
cp -r /tmp/clang_complete/* ~/.vim
mkdir -p ~/.vim/pack/completion/start/
git clone https://github.com/xavierd/clang_complete.git ~/.vim/pack/completion/start/clang_complete
Follow regular procedure outlined in corresponding documentation
Using vimball (not in nvim)
To build and install in one step, type: $ make install
To build and install in two steps, type:
$ make
$ vim clang_complete.vmb -c 'so %' -c 'q'
- Set the
clang_library_path
to the directory containing file named libclang.{dll,so,dylib} (for Windows, Unix variants and OS X respectively) or the file itself, example:
" provide path directly to the library file
let g:clang_library_path='/usr/lib/llvm-14/lib/libclang-14.so.1'
- Compiler options can be configured in a
.clang_complete
file in each project root. Example of.clang_complete
file:
-DDEBUG
-include ../config.h
-I../common
-I/usr/include/c++/4.5.3/
-I/usr/include/c++/4.5.3/x86_64-slackware-linux/
The plugin provides list of matches, after that you pick completion from a generic completion menu where Ctrl+N, Ctrl+P and alike work and wrap around ends of list.
See doc/clang_complete.txt for help and license.
The first step is to check values of 'omnifunc'
and 'completefunc'
options
in a C++ buffer where completion doesn't work (the value should be
ClangComplete
). This can be done with the following command:
:set omnifunc? completefunc?
Output of :messages
command after startup could also show something useful in
case there were problems with plugin initialization.
If everything is fine, next step might be to load only clang_complete plugin and see if anything changes.