1

This question is related to this one.

Damian Conway provided a nice snippet for marking excessive line length in his recent OSCON 2013 talk about Vim.

highlight ColorColumn ctermbg=magenta
call matchadd('ColorColumn', '\%81v', 100)

which results in this:

screenshot of terminal Vim

It works great when using console Vim. However, changing the ctermbg=magenta part to guibg=Magenta only highlights the character, but doesn't color it in magenta.

screenshot of gVim

How can I make this work for gVim correctly?

2
  • Every competently written colorscheme has a definition for the ColorColumn highlight group so… why don't you simply use :set colorcolumn=XX that's been available since quite some time?
    – romainl
    Jun 21, 2014 at 9:27
  • Using set colorcolumn=XX places a static border in display, which is the one I've been using for some time. I wanted this behavior instead.
    – Isxek
    Jun 21, 2014 at 11:14

1 Answer 1

3

Umm, works for me? As a reference, I'm running Vim v7.4 patch 335. (it's not bleeding much!!)

I added the following two lines to my .vimrc:

highlight ColorColumn ctermbg=magenta guibg=Magenta
call matchadd('ColorColumn', '\%81v', 100)

Reloaded vim and taa-daa! The characters at the 81st position were magically magenta-ized.


EDIT: As per the comments below, we discovered that @isxek needed to put these two lines LAST in their .vimrc file. Evidently, the colorscheme used (Molokai) sets the ColorColumn highlight scheme. I didn't see this issue since I set the ColorColumn highlight AFTER everything's loaded, essentially performing the same thing as 'putting the lines last'.


Personally, I'd recommend using a unique Group identifier so you don't mess with the highlight colors set for the actual ColorColumn highlighting group.

highlight MyLineTooLongMarker ctermbg=magenta guibg=Magenta
call matchadd('MyLineTooLongMarker', '\%81v', 100)

Works for both vim and gvim.

Have you tried/Do you use ColorColumn? Relatively new option in Vim to highlight a column (or columns!) based on textwidth. Was added with version 7.3. Very handy!

I use it thusly:

" it didn't exist before Vim v7.3, sometimes I encounter older versions of vim (centOS, looking at you!!)
if v:version >= 703
    " a faint grey (gray?) color, not too insistent
    highlight ColorColumn term=reverse ctermbg=233 guibg=#202020
    " put the marker(s) at 'textwidth+2' (and at position 120)
    set colorcolumn=+2,120
    " if we're called as '*view', or on a console, turn off the colorcolumn
    if v:progname =~? 'view' || &term =~? 'linux|console'
        set colorcolumn=
    endif
endif

So I essentially have two lines on my display, shown at textwidth + 2 and at position 120, as my default. I've grabbed a screenshot and moved the lines with set colorcolumn=+2,90 so it isn't too wide for here. Looks like this:

gvim showing colorcolumn lines

You can see the two vertical grey lines, positioned at textwidth + 2, and at position 90. Here, my textwidth was set to 78, so the lines are positioned at 80, and 90 characters out.

Now, you COULD use the two lines you've got to add a form of colorcolumn for a pre-v7.3 version of vim. Stick them in an else clause of the version check block above.

4
  • I've clarified the question further. The line exceeding the length restriction is indeed getting highlighted in the correct character, but it's not getting colored in magenta (or in any color for that matter). I wanted to try this out after working with textwidth and colorcolumn previously.
    – Isxek
    Jun 21, 2014 at 6:35
  • Would it have anything to do with the current colorscheme, perhaps? I use Molokai. What colorscheme do you use?
    – Isxek
    Jun 21, 2014 at 6:36
  • colorscheme oh-la-la Renamed it, used to have the little tics above the a's. Where are you putting the two lines in your .vimrc? Try putting them dead last in the file, they may be being overridden. (Well, the highlight setting, which is why I suggested using a custom highlight group name)
    – lornix
    Jun 21, 2014 at 6:58
  • Wow, moving them to the last part did work. Thanks a bunch! Could you change your answer to this so I can accept it? It would be a shame if it's just left as a comment.
    – Isxek
    Jun 21, 2014 at 8:32

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .