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* Use consistent/thorough ftplugin/indent unloadingTom Ryder2017-11-081-2/+4
| | | | Unload all maps too, with silent! in case they don't exist.
* Add user_ftplugin.vim and user_indent.vim pluginsTom Ryder2017-11-071-7/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This reverts commit 09b83b6 and replaces it with a working version. Because of the order in which the autocmd hooks run, the attempted method of adding unloading instructions for my custom ftplugin and indent rules to the b:undo_ftplugin and b:undo_indent doesn't actually work. This is because the custom rules for both groups from ~/.vim are sourced *first*, before their core versions, so the changes the custom rules made to b:undo_ftplugin and b:undo_indent are simply clobbered by the core version when it loads itself. Therefore we need to arrange for two things: 1. A custom variable needs to be checked and executed when the filetype changes to revert the changes for the custom ftplugin or indent rules. 2. That execution needs to take place *first* when the filetype changes. I wrote two simple plugins with very similar code that are designed to run as a user's custom ftplugin.vim and indent.vim implementations, running before their brethren in the Vim core, and setting up an autocmd hook to :execute b:undo_user_ftplugin and b:undo_user_indent plugin respectively. This seemed to work well, so I've implemented it. It involves adding a shim to ~/.vim/indent.vim and ~/.vim/ftplugin.vim to "preload" the plugin when the `filetype indent plugin on` call is made. I've added that to the relevant Makefile targets.
* Use b:undo variables correctlyTom Ryder2017-11-071-0/+11
Setting or adding to b:undo_indent and b:undo_ftplugin variables, which I only learned about just now, allows me to avoid the _GLOBAL.vim hack and remove some files from both vim/indent/ and vim/ftplugin/. These variables aren't subjected to :execute automatically in anything older than Vim 7.0, but I don't think that's too much of a concern as the only real reason they're needed are for changing filetypes in the same buffer, which doesn't happen that often anyway.