1*netbeans.txt*  For Vim version 7.3.  Last change: 2010 Jul 20
2
3
4		  VIM REFERENCE MANUAL    by Gordon Prieur et al.
5
6
7			*socket-interface* *netbeans* *netbeans-support*
8
9Vim NetBeans Protocol: a socket interface for Vim integration into an IDE.
10
111.  Introduction				|netbeans-intro|
122.  Integration features			|netbeans-integration|
133.  Configuring Vim for NetBeans		|netbeans-configure|
144.  Error Messages				|netbeans-messages|
155.  Running Vim in NetBeans mode		|netbeans-run|
166.  NetBeans protocol				|netbeans-protocol|
177.  NetBeans commands				|netbeans-commands|
188.  Known problems				|netbeans-problems|
199.  Debugging NetBeans protocol			|netbeans-debugging|
2010. NetBeans External Editor
21    10.1. Downloading NetBeans			|netbeans-download|
22    10.2. NetBeans Key Bindings			|netbeans-keybindings|
23    10.3. Preparing NetBeans for Vim		|netbeans-preparation|
24    10.4. Obtaining the External Editor Module	|obtaining-exted|
25    10.5. Setting up NetBeans to run with Vim	|netbeans-setup|
26
27{Vi does not have any of these features}
28{only available when compiled with the |+netbeans_intg| feature}
29
30==============================================================================
311. Introduction						*netbeans-intro*
32
33The NetBeans interface was initially developed to integrate Vim into the
34NetBeans Java IDE, using the external editor plugin.  This NetBeans plugin no
35longer exists for recent versions of NetBeans but the protocol was developed
36in such a way that any IDE can use it to integrate Vim.
37
38The NetBeans protocol of Vim is a text based communication protocol, over a
39classical TCP socket. There is no dependency on Java or NetBeans. Any language
40or environment providing a socket interface can control Vim using this
41protocol. There are existing implementations in C, C++, Python and Java. The
42name NetBeans is kept today for historical reasons.
43
44Current projects using the NetBeans protocol of Vim are:
45- VimIntegration, description of various projects doing Vim Integration:
46	http://www.freehackers.org/VimIntegration
47- Agide, an IDE for the AAP project, written in Python:
48	http://www.a-a-p.org
49- Clewn, a gdb integration into Vim, written in C:
50	http://clewn.sourceforge.net/
51- Pyclewn, a gdb integration into Vim, written in Python:
52	http://pyclewn.sourceforge.net/
53- VimPlugin, integration of Vim inside Eclipse:
54	http://vimplugin.sourceforge.net/wiki/pmwiki.php
55- PIDA, IDE written in Python integrating Vim:
56	http://pida.co.uk/
57- VimWrapper, library to easy Vim integration into IDE:
58	http://www.freehackers.org/VimWrapper
59
60Check the specific project pages to see how to use Vim with these projects.
61
62In the rest of this help page, we will use the term "Vim Controller" to
63describe the program controlling Vim through the NetBeans socket interface.
64
65
66About the NetBeans IDE ~
67
68NetBeans is an open source Integrated Development Environment developed
69jointly by Sun Microsystems, Inc. and the netbeans.org developer community.
70Initially just a Java IDE, NetBeans has had C, C++, and Fortran support added
71in recent releases.
72
73For more information visit the main NetBeans web site http://www.netbeans.org.
74The External Editor is now, unfortunately, declared obsolete.  See
75 http://externaleditor.netbeans.org.
76
77Sun Microsystems, Inc. also ships NetBeans under the name Sun ONE Studio.
78Visit http://www.sun.com for more information regarding the Sun ONE Studio
79product line.
80
81Current releases of NetBeans provide full support for Java and limited support
82for C, C++, and Fortran.  Current releases of Sun ONE Studio provide full
83support for Java, C, C++, and Fortran.
84
85==============================================================================
862. Integration features					*netbeans-integration*
87
88The NetBeans socket interface of Vim allows to get information from Vim or to
89ask Vim to perform specific actions:
90- get information about buffer: buffer name, cursor position, buffer content,
91  etc.
92- be notified when buffers are open or closed
93- be notified of how the buffer content is modified
94- load and save files
95- modify the buffer content
96- installing special key bindings
97- raise the window, control the window geometry
98
99For sending key strokes to Vim or for evaluating functions in Vim, you must
100use the |clientserver| interface.
101
102
103==============================================================================
1043. Configuring Vim for NetBeans			*netbeans-configure*
105
106For more help about installing Vim, please read |usr_90.txt| in the Vim User
107Manual.
108
109
110On Unix:
111--------
112
113When running configure without arguments the NetBeans interface should be
114included.  That is, if the configure check to find out if your system supports
115the required features succeeds.
116
117In case you do not want the NetBeans interface you can disable it by
118uncommenting a line with "--disable-netbeans" in the Makefile.
119
120Currently the NetBeans interface is supported by Vim running in a terminal and
121by GVim when it is run with one of the following GUIs: GTK, GNOME, and Motif.
122
123If Motif support is required the user must supply XPM libraries.  See
124|workshop-xpm| for details on obtaining the latest version of XPM.
125
126
127On MS-Windows:
128--------------
129
130The Win32 support is now in beta stage.
131
132To use XPM signs on Win32 (e.g. when using with NetBeans) you can compile
133XPM by yourself or use precompiled libraries from http://iamphet.nm.ru/misc/
134(for MS Visual C++) or http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net (for MinGW).
135
136Enable debugging:
137-----------------
138
139To enable debugging of Vim and of the NetBeans protocol, the "NBDEBUG" macro
140needs to be defined.  Search in the Makefile of the platform you are using for
141"NBDEBUG" to see what line needs to be uncommented.  This effectively adds
142"-DNBDEBUG" to the compile command.  Also see |netbeans-debugging|
143
144==============================================================================
1454. Error Messages					*netbeans-messages*
146
147These error messages are specific to NetBeans socket protocol:
148
149							*E463*
150Region is guarded, cannot modify
151		The Vim Controller has defined guarded areas in the text,
152		which you cannot change.  Also sets the current buffer, if
153		necessary.
154
155							*E532*
156The defineAnnoType highlighting color name is too long
157		The maximum length of the "fg" or "bg" color argument in the
158		defineAnnoType command is 32 characters.
159		New in version 2.5.
160
161							*E656*
162Writes of unmodified buffers forbidden
163		Writes of unmodified buffers that were opened from the
164		Vim Controller are not possible.
165
166							*E657*
167Partial writes disallowed
168		Partial writes for buffers that were opened from the
169		Vim Controller are not allowed.
170
171							*E658*
172Connection lost for this buffer
173		The Vim Controller has become confused about the state of
174		this file.  Rather than risk data corruption, it has severed
175		the connection for this file.  Vim will take over
176		responsibility for saving changes to this file and the
177		Vim Controller will no longer know of these changes.
178
179							*E744*
180Read-only file
181		Vim normally allows changes to a read-only file and only
182		enforces the read-only rule if you try to write the file.
183		However, NetBeans does not let you make changes to a file
184		which is read-only and becomes confused if Vim does this.
185		So Vim does not allow modifications to files when run
186		in NetBeans mode.
187
188==============================================================================
1895. Running Vim in NetBeans mode				*netbeans-run*
190
191There are two different ways to run Vim in NetBeans mode:
192
193	+ an IDE may start Vim with the |-nb| command line argument
194	+ NetBeans can be started from within Vim with the |:nbstart| command
195
196							*netbeans-parameters*
197Three forms can be used to setup the NetBeans connection parameters.
198When started from the command line, the |-nb| command line argument may be:
199
200	-nb={fname}				from a file
201	-nb:{hostname}:{addr}:{password}	directly
202	-nb					from a file or environment
203
204When started from within Vim, the |:nbstart| optional argument may be:
205
206	={fname}				from a file
207	:{hostname}:{addr}:{password}	        directly
208	<MISSING ARGUMENT>			from a file or environment
209
210							*E660* *E668*
211When NetBeans is started from the command line, for security reasons, the best
212method is to write the information in a file readable only by the user.  The
213name of the file can be passed with the "-nb={fname}" argument or, when "-nb"
214is used without a parameter, the environment variable "__NETBEANS_CONINFO".
215The file must contain these three lines, in any order:
216
217	host={hostname}
218	port={addr}
219	auth={password}
220
221Other lines are ignored.  The Vim Controller is responsible for deleting the
222file afterwards.
223
224{hostname} is the name of the machine where Vim Controller is running.  When
225omitted the environment variable "__NETBEANS_HOST" is used or the default
226"localhost".
227
228{addr} is the port number for the NetBeans interface.  When omitted the
229environment variable "__NETBEANS_SOCKET" is used or the default 3219.
230
231{password} is the password for connecting to NetBeans.  When omitted the
232environment variable "__NETBEANS_VIM_PASSWORD" is used or "changeme".
233
234Vim will initiate a socket connection (client side) to the specified host and
235port upon startup. The password will be sent with the AUTH event when the
236connection has been established.
237
238
239==============================================================================
2406. NetBeans protocol					*netbeans-protocol*
241
242The communication between the Vim Controller and Vim uses plain text
243messages.  This protocol was first designed to work with the external editor
244module of NetBeans.  Later it was extended to work with Agide (A-A-P GUI IDE,
245see http://www.a-a-p.org) and then with other IDE. The extensions are marked
246with "version 2.1".
247
248Version 2.2 of the protocol has several minor changes which should only affect
249NetBeans users (ie, not Agide users).  However, a bug was fixed which could
250cause confusion.  The netbeans_saved() function sent a "save" protocol
251command.  In protocol version 2.1 and earlier this was incorrectly interpreted
252as a notification that a write had taken place.  In reality, it told NetBeans
253to save the file so multiple writes were being done.  This caused various
254problems and has been fixed in 2.2.  To decrease the likelihood of this
255confusion happening again, netbeans_saved() has been renamed to
256netbeans_save_buffer().
257
258We are now at version 2.5.  For the differences between 2.4 and 2.5 search for
259"2.5" below.
260
261The messages are currently sent over a socket.  Since the messages are in
262plain UTF-8 text this protocol could also be used with any other communication
263mechanism.
264
2656.1 Kinds of messages		|nb-messages|
2666.2 Terms			|nb-terms|
2676.3 Commands			|nb-commands|
2686.4 Functions and Replies	|nb-functions|
2696.5 Events			|nb-events|
2706.6 Special messages		|nb-special|
2716.7 Protocol errors		|nb-protocol_errors|
272
273
2746.1 Kinds of messages					*nb-messages*
275
276There are four kinds of messages:
277
278kind		direction	comment ~
279Command		IDE -> editor	no reply necessary
280Function	IDE -> editor	editor must send back a reply
281Reply		editor -> IDE	only in response to a Function
282Event		editor -> IDE	no reply necessary
283
284The messages are sent as a single line with a terminating newline character.
285Arguments are separated by a single space.  The first item of the message
286depends on the kind of message:
287
288kind		first item		example ~
289Command		bufID:name!seqno	11:showBalloon!123 "text"
290Function	bufID:name/seqno	11:getLength/123
291Reply		seqno			123 5000
292Event		bufID:name=seqno	11:keyCommand=123 "S-F2"
293
294
295
2966.2 Terms						*nb-terms*
297
298bufID		Buffer number.  A message may be either for a specific buffer
299		or generic.  Generic messages use a bufID of zero.  NOTE: this
300		buffer ID is assigned by the IDE, it is not Vim's buffer
301		number.  The bufID must be a sequentially rising number,
302		starting at one.
303
304seqno		The IDE uses a sequence number for Commands and Functions.  A
305		Reply must use the sequence number of the Function that it is
306		associated with.  A zero sequence number can be used for
307		Events (the seqno of the last received Command or Function can
308		also be used).
309
310string		Argument in double quotes.  Text is in UTF-8 encoding.  This
311		means ASCII is passed as-is.  Special characters are
312		represented with a backslash:
313			\"	double quote
314			\n	newline
315			\r	carriage-return
316			\t	tab (optional, also works literally)
317			\\	backslash
318		NUL bytes are not allowed!
319
320boolean		Argument with two possible values:
321			T	true
322			F	false
323
324number		Argument with a decimal number.
325
326color		Argument with either a decimal number, "none" (without the
327		quotes) or the name of a color (without the quotes) defined
328		both in the color list in |highlight-ctermfg| and in the color
329		list in |gui-colors|.
330		New in version 2.5.
331
332offset		A number argument that indicates a byte position in a buffer.
333		The first byte has offset zero.  Line breaks are counted for
334		how they appear in the file (CR/LF counts for two bytes).
335		Note that a multi-byte character is counted for the number of
336		bytes it takes.
337
338lnum/col	Argument with a line number and column number position.  The
339		line number starts with one, the column is the byte position,
340		starting with zero.  Note that a multi-byte character counts
341		for several columns.
342
343pathname	String argument: file name with full path.
344
345
3466.3 Commands						*nb-commands*
347
348actionMenuItem	Not implemented.
349
350actionSensitivity
351		Not implemented.
352
353addAnno serNum typeNum off len
354		Place an annotation in this buffer.
355		Arguments:
356		   serNum	number	serial number of this placed
357					annotation, used to be able to remove
358					it
359		   typeNum	number	sequence number of the annotation
360					defined with defineAnnoType for this
361					buffer
362		   off		number	offset where annotation is to be placed
363		   len		number	not used
364		In version 2.1 "lnum/col" can be used instead of "off".
365
366balloonResult text
367		Not implemented.
368
369close		Close the buffer.  This leaves us without current buffer, very
370		dangerous to use!
371
372create		Creates a buffer without a name.  Replaces the current buffer
373		(it's hidden when it was changed).
374		The Vim Controller should use this as the first command for a
375		file that is being opened.  The sequence of commands could be:
376			create
377			setCaretListener	(ignored)
378			setModified		(no effect)
379			setContentType		(ignored)
380			startDocumentListen
381			setTitle
382			setFullName
383
384defineAnnoType typeNum typeName tooltip glyphFile fg bg
385		Define a type of annotation for this buffer.
386		Arguments:
387		   typeNum	number	sequence number (not really used)
388		   typeName	string	name that identifies this annotation
389		   tooltip	string	not used
390		   glyphFile	string	name of icon file
391		   fg		color	foreground color for line highlighting
392		   bg		color	background color for line highlighting
393		Vim will define a sign for the annotation.
394		When color is a number, this is the "#rrggbb" Red, Green and
395		Blue values of the color (see |gui-colors|) and the
396		highlighting is only defined for GVim.
397		When color is a name, this color is defined both for Vim
398		running in a color terminal and for GVim.
399		When both "fg" and "bg" are "none" no line highlighting is
400		used (new in version 2.1).
401		When "glyphFile" is empty, no text sign is used (new in
402		version 2.1).
403		When "glyphFile" is one or two characters long, a text sign is
404		defined (new in version 2.1).
405		Note: the annotations will be defined in sequence, and the
406		sequence number is later used with addAnno.
407
408editFile pathname
409		Set the name for the buffer and edit the file "pathname", a
410		string argument.
411		Normal way for the IDE to tell the editor to edit a file.
412
413		You must set a bufId different of 0 with this command to
414		assign a bufId to the buffer. It will trigger an event
415		fileOpened with a bufId of 0 but the buffer has been assigned.
416
417		If the IDE is going to pass the file text to the editor use
418		these commands instead:
419			setFullName
420			insert
421			initDone
422		New in version 2.1.
423
424enableBalloonEval
425		Not implemented.
426
427endAtomic	End an atomic operation.  The changes between "startAtomic"
428		and "endAtomic" can be undone as one operation.  But it's not
429		implemented yet.  Redraw when necessary.
430
431guard off len
432		Mark an area in the buffer as guarded.  This means it cannot
433		be edited.  "off" and "len" are numbers and specify the text
434		to be guarded.
435
436initDone	Mark the buffer as ready for use.  Implicitly makes the buffer
437		the current buffer.  Fires the BufReadPost autocommand event.
438
439insertDone
440		Sent by Vim Controller to tell Vim an initial file insert is
441		done.  This triggers a read message being printed.  Prior to
442		version 2.3, no read messages were displayed after opening a
443		file.  New in version 2.3.
444
445moveAnnoToFront serNum
446		Not implemented.
447
448netbeansBuffer isNetbeansBuffer
449		If "isNetbeansBuffer" is "T" then this buffer is "owned" by
450		NetBeans.
451		New in version 2.2.
452
453putBufferNumber pathname
454		Associate a buffer number with the Vim buffer by the name
455		"pathname", a string argument.  To be used when the editor
456		reported editing another file to the IDE and the IDE needs to
457		tell the editor what buffer number it will use for this file.
458		Also marks the buffer as initialized.
459		New in version 2.1.
460
461raise		Bring the editor to the foreground.
462		Only when Vim is run with a GUI.
463		New in version 2.1.
464
465removeAnno serNum
466		Remove a previously place annotation for this buffer.
467		"serNum" is the same number used in addAnno.
468
469save		Save the buffer when it was modified.  The other side of the
470		interface is expected to write the buffer and invoke
471		"setModified" to reset the "changed" flag of the buffer.
472		The writing is skipped when one of these conditions is true:
473		- 'write' is not set
474		- the buffer is read-only
475		- the buffer does not have a file name
476		- 'buftype' disallows writing
477		New in version 2.2.
478
479saveDone
480		Sent by Vim Controller to tell Vim a save is done.  This
481		triggers a save message being printed.  Prior to version 2.3,
482		no save messages were displayed after a save.
483		New in version 2.3.
484
485setAsUser	Not implemented.
486
487setBufferNumber pathname
488		Associate a buffer number with Vim buffer by the name
489		"pathname".  To be used when the editor reported editing
490		another file to the IDE and the IDE needs to tell the editor
491		what buffer number it will use for this file.
492		Has the side effect of making the buffer the current buffer.
493		See "putBufferNumber" for a more useful command.
494
495setContentType
496		Not implemented.
497
498setDot off	Make the buffer the current buffer and set the cursor at the
499		specified position.  If the buffer is open in another window
500		than make that window the current window.
501		If there are folds they are opened to make the cursor line
502		visible.
503		In version 2.1 "lnum/col" can be used instead of "off".
504
505setExitDelay seconds
506		Set the delay for exiting to "seconds", a number.
507		This delay is used to give the IDE a chance to handle things
508		before really exiting.  The default delay is two seconds.
509		New in version 2.1.
510		Obsolete in version 2.3.
511
512setFullName pathname
513		Set the file name to be used for a buffer to "pathname", a
514		string argument.
515		Used when the IDE wants to edit a file under control of the
516		IDE.  This makes the buffer the current buffer, but does not
517		read the file.  "insert" commands will be used next to set the
518		contents.
519
520setLocAndSize	Not implemented.
521
522setMark		Not implemented.
523
524setModified modified
525		When the boolean argument "modified" is "T" mark the buffer as
526		modified, when it is "F" mark it as unmodified.
527
528setModtime time
529		Update a buffers modification time after the file has been
530		saved directly by the Vim Controller.
531		New in version 2.3.
532
533setReadOnly
534		Set a file as readonly
535		Implemented in version 2.3.
536
537setStyle	Not implemented.
538
539setTitle name
540		Set the title for the buffer to "name", a string argument.
541		The title is only used for the Vim Controller functions, not
542		by Vim.
543
544setVisible visible
545		When the boolean argument "visible" is "T", goto the buffer.
546		The "F" argument does nothing.
547
548showBalloon text
549		Show a balloon (popup window) at the mouse pointer position,
550		containing "text", a string argument.  The balloon should
551		disappear when the mouse is moved more than a few pixels.
552		Only when Vim is run with a GUI.
553		New in version 2.1.
554
555specialKeys
556		Map a set of keys (mostly function keys) to be passed back
557		to the Vim Controller for processing.  This lets regular IDE
558		hotkeys be used from Vim.
559		Implemented in version 2.3.
560
561startAtomic	Begin an atomic operation.  The screen will not be updated
562		until "endAtomic" is given.
563
564startCaretListen
565		Not implemented.
566
567startDocumentListen
568		Mark the buffer to report changes to the IDE with the
569		"insert" and "remove" events.  The default is to report
570		changes.
571
572stopCaretListen
573		Not implemented.
574
575stopDocumentListen
576		Mark the buffer to stop reporting changes to the IDE.
577		Opposite of startDocumentListen.
578		NOTE: if "netbeansBuffer" was used to mark this buffer as a
579		NetBeans buffer, then the buffer is deleted in Vim.  This is
580		for compatibility with Sun Studio 10.
581
582unguard off len
583		Opposite of "guard", remove guarding for a text area.
584		Also sets the current buffer, if necessary.
585
586version		Not implemented.
587
588
5896.4 Functions and Replies				*nb-functions*
590
591getDot		Not implemented.
592
593getCursor	Return the current buffer and cursor position.
594		The reply is:
595			seqno bufID lnum col off
596		seqno = sequence number of the function
597		bufID = buffer ID of the current buffer (if this is unknown -1
598			is used)
599		lnum  = line number of the cursor (first line is one)
600		col   = column number of the cursor (in bytes, zero based)
601		off   = offset of the cursor in the buffer (in bytes)
602		New in version 2.1.
603
604getLength	Return the length of the buffer in bytes.
605		Reply example for a buffer with 5000 bytes:
606			123 5000
607		TODO: explain use of partial line.
608
609getMark		Not implemented.
610
611getAnno serNum
612		Return the line number of the annotation in the buffer.
613		Argument:
614			serNum		serial number of this placed annotation
615		The reply is:
616			123 lnum	line number of the annotation
617			123 0		invalid annotation serial number
618		New in version 2.4.
619
620getModified	When a buffer is specified: Return zero if the buffer does not
621		have changes, one if it does have changes.
622		When no buffer is specified (buffer number zero): Return the
623		number of buffers with changes.  When the result is zero it's
624		safe to tell Vim to exit.
625		New in version 2.1.
626
627getText		Return the contents of the buffer as a string.
628		Reply example for a buffer with two lines
629			123 "first line\nsecond line\n"
630		NOTE: docs indicate an offset and length argument, but this is
631		not implemented.
632
633insert off text
634		Insert "text" before position "off".  "text" is a string
635		argument, "off" a number.
636		"text" should have a "\n" (newline) at the end of each line.
637		Or "\r\n" when 'fileformat' is "dos".  When using "insert" in
638		an empty buffer Vim will set 'fileformat' accordingly.
639		When "off" points to the start of a line the text is inserted
640		above this line.  Thus when "off" is zero lines are inserted
641		before the first line.
642		When "off" points after the start of a line, possibly on the
643		NUL at the end of a line, the first line of text is appended
644		to this line.  Further lines come below it.
645		Possible replies:
646			123		no problem
647			123 !message	failed
648		Note that the message in the reply is not quoted.
649		Also sets the current buffer, if necessary.
650		Does not move the cursor to the changed text.
651		Resets undo information.
652
653remove off length
654		Delete "length" bytes of text at position "off".  Both
655		arguments are numbers.
656		Possible replies:
657			123		no problem
658			123 !message	failed
659		Note that the message in the reply is not quoted.
660		Also sets the current buffer, if necessary.
661
662saveAndExit	Perform the equivalent of closing Vim: ":confirm qall".
663		If there are no changed files or the user does not cancel the
664		operation Vim exits and no result is sent back.  The IDE can
665		consider closing the connection as a successful result.
666		If the user cancels the operation the number of modified
667		buffers that remains is returned and Vim does not exit.
668		New in version 2.1.
669
670
6716.5 Events						*nb-events*
672
673balloonEval off len type
674		The mouse pointer rests on text for a short while.  When "len"
675		is zero, there is no selection and the pointer is at position
676		"off".  When "len" is non-zero the text from position "off" to
677		"off" + "len" is selected.
678		Only sent after "enableBalloonEval" was used for this buffer.
679		"type" is not yet defined.
680		Not implemented yet.
681
682balloonText text
683		Used when 'ballooneval' is set and the mouse pointer rests on
684		some text for a moment.  "text" is a string, the text under
685		the mouse pointer.
686		Only when Vim is run with a GUI.
687		New in version 2.1.
688
689buttonRelease button lnum col
690		Report which button was pressed and the location of the cursor
691		at the time of the release.  Only for buffers that are owned
692		by the Vim Controller.  This event is not sent if the button
693		was released while the mouse was in the status line or in a
694		separator line.  If col is less than 1 the button release was
695		in the sign area.
696		New in version 2.2.
697
698disconnect
699		Tell the Vim Controller that Vim is exiting and not to try and
700		read or write more commands.
701		New in version 2.3.
702
703fileClosed	Not implemented.
704
705fileModified	Not implemented.
706
707fileOpened pathname open modified
708		A file was opened by the user.
709		Arguments:
710		   pathname	string	  name of the file
711		   open		boolean   always "T"
712		   modified	boolean   always "F"
713
714geometry cols rows x y
715		Report the size and position of the editor window.
716		Arguments:
717		   cols		number	  number of text columns
718		   rows		number	  number of text rows
719		   x		number	  pixel position on screen
720		   y		number	  pixel position on screen
721		Only works for Motif.
722
723insert off text
724		Text "text" has been inserted in Vim at position "off".
725		Only fired when enabled, see "startDocumentListen".
726
727invokeAction	Not implemented.
728
729keyCommand keyName
730		Reports a special key being pressed with name "keyName", which
731		is a string.
732		Supported key names:
733			F1		function key 1
734			F2		function key 2
735			...
736			F12		function key 12
737
738			' '		space (without the quotes)
739			!		exclamation mark
740			...		any other ASCII printable character
741			~		tilde
742
743			X		any unrecognized key
744
745		The key may be prepended by "C", "S" and/or "M" for Control,
746		Shift and Meta (Alt) modifiers.  If there is a modifier a dash
747		is used to separate it from the key name.  For example:
748		"C-F2".
749		ASCII characters are new in version 2.1.
750
751keyAtPos keyName lnum/col
752		Like "keyCommand" and also report the line number and column
753		of the cursor.
754		New in version 2.1.
755
756killed		A file was deleted or wiped out by the user and the buffer
757		annotations have been removed.  The bufID number for this
758		buffer has become invalid.  Only for files that have been
759		assigned a bufID number by the IDE.
760
761newDotAndMark off off
762		Reports the position of the cursor being at "off" bytes into
763		the buffer.  Only sent just before a "keyCommand" event.
764
765quit		Not implemented.
766
767remove off len
768		Text was deleted in Vim at position "off" with byte length
769		"len".
770		Only fired when enabled, see "startDocumentListen".
771
772revert		Not implemented.
773
774save		The buffer has been saved and is now unmodified.
775		Only fired when enabled, see "startDocumentListen".
776
777startupDone	The editor has finished its startup work and is ready for
778		editing files.
779		New in version 2.1.
780
781unmodified	The buffer is now unmodified.
782		Only fired when enabled, see "startDocumentListen".
783
784version vers	Report the version of the interface implementation.  Vim
785		reports "2.4" (including the quotes).
786
787
7886.6 Special messages					*nb-special*
789
790These messages do not follow the style of the messages above.  They are
791terminated by a newline character.
792
793ACCEPT		Not used.
794
795AUTH password	editor -> IDE: First message that the editor sends to the IDE.
796		Must contain the password for the socket server, as specified
797		with the |-nb| argument.  No quotes are used!
798
799DISCONNECT	IDE -> editor: break the connection.  The editor will exit.
800		The IDE must only send this message when there are no unsaved
801		changes!
802
803DETACH		IDE -> editor: break the connection without exiting the
804		editor.  Used when the IDE exits without bringing down the
805		editor as well.
806		New in version 2.1.
807
808REJECT		Not used.
809
810
8116.7 Protocol errors					*nb-protocol_errors*
812
813These errors occur when a message violates the protocol:
814*E627* *E628* *E629* *E630* *E631* *E632* *E633* *E634* *E635* *E636*
815*E637* *E638* *E639* *E640* *E641* *E642* *E643* *E644* *E645* *E646*
816*E647* *E648* *E649* *E650* *E651* *E652* *E653* *E654*
817
818
819==============================================================================
8207. NetBeans commands					*netbeans-commands*
821
822							*:nbstart* *E511*
823:nbs[tart] {connection}	Start a new Netbeans session with {connection} as the
824			socket connection parameters.  The format of
825			{connection} is described in |netbeans-parameters|.
826			At any time, one may check if the netbeans socket is
827			connected by running the command:
828			':echo has("netbeans_enabled")'
829
830							*:nbclose*
831:nbc[lose]		Close the current NetBeans session. Remove all placed
832			signs.
833
834							*:nbkey*
835:nb[key] {key}		Pass the {key} to the Vim Controller for processing
836
837When a hot-key has been installed with the specialKeys command, this command
838can be used to generate a hotkey messages to the Vim Controller. The events
839newDotAndMark, keyCommand and keyAtPos are generated (in this order).
840
841
842==============================================================================
8438. Known problems					*netbeans-problems*
844
845NUL bytes are not possible.  For editor -> IDE they will appear as NL
846characters.  For IDE -> editor they cannot be inserted.
847
848A NetBeans session may be initiated with Vim running in a terminal, and
849continued later in a GUI environment after running the |:gui| command. In this
850case, the highlighting defined for the NetBeans annotations may be cleared
851when the ":gui" command sources .gvimrc and this file loads a colorscheme
852that runs the command ":highlight clear".
853New in version 2.5.
854
855
856==============================================================================
8579. Debugging NetBeans protocol				*netbeans-debugging*
858
859To debug the Vim protocol, you must first compile Vim with debugging support
860and NetBeans debugging support.  See |netbeans-configure| for instructions
861about Vim compiling and how to enable debug support.
862
863When running Vim, set the following environment variables:
864
865    export SPRO_GVIM_DEBUG=netbeans.log
866    export SPRO_GVIM_DLEVEL=0xffffffff
867
868Vim will then log all the incoming and outgoing messages of the NetBeans
869protocol to the file netbeans.log .
870
871The content of netbeans.log after a session looks like this:
872Tue May 20 17:19:27 2008
873EVT: 0:startupDone=0
874CMD 1: (1) create
875CMD 2: (1) setTitle "testfile1.txt"
876CMD 3: (1) setFullName "testfile1.txt"
877EVT(suppressed): 1:remove=3 0 -1
878EVT: 1:fileOpened=0 "d:\\work\\vimWrapper\\vimWrapper2\\pyvimwrapper\\tests\\testfile1.txt" T F
879CMD 4: (1) initDone
880FUN 5: (0) getCursor
881REP 5: 1 1 0 0
882CMD 6: (2) create
883CMD 7: (2) setTitle "testfile2.txt"
884CMD 8: (2) setFullName "testfile2.txt"
885EVT(suppressed): 2:remove=8 0 -1
886EVT: 2:fileOpened=0 "d:\\work\\vimWrapper\\vimWrapper2\\pyvimwrapper\\tests\\testfile2.txt" T F
887CMD 9: (2) initDone
888
889
890==============================================================================
89110. NetBeans External Editor
892
893NOTE: This information is obsolete!  Only relevant if you are using an old
894version of NetBeans.
895
896
89710.1. Downloading NetBeans			*netbeans-download*
898
899The NetBeans IDE is available for download from netbeans.org.  You can download
900a released version, download sources, or use CVS to download the current
901source tree.  If you choose to download sources, follow directions from
902netbeans.org on building NetBeans.
903
904Depending on the version of NetBeans you download, you may need to do further
905work to get the required External Editor module.  This is the module which lets
906NetBeans work with gvim (or xemacs :-).  See http://externaleditor.netbeans.org
907for details on downloading this module if your NetBeans release does not have
908it.
909
910For C, C++, and Fortran support you will also need the cpp module.  See
911http://cpp.netbeans.org for information regarding this module.
912
913You can also download Sun ONE Studio from Sun Microsystems, Inc for a 30 day
914free trial.  See http://www.sun.com for further details.
915
916
91710.2. NetBeans Key Bindings			*netbeans-keybindings*
918
919Vim understands a number of key bindings that execute NetBeans commands.
920These are typically all the Function key combinations.  To execute a NetBeans
921command, the user must press the Pause key followed by a NetBeans key binding.
922For example, in order to compile a Java file, the NetBeans key binding is
923"F9".  So, while in vim, press "Pause F9" to compile a java file.  To toggle a
924breakpoint at the current line, press "Pause Shift F8".
925
926The Pause key is Function key 21.  If you don't have a working Pause key and
927want to use F8 instead, use: >
928
929	:map <F8> <F21>
930
931The External Editor module dynamically reads the NetBeans key bindings so vim
932should always have the latest key bindings, even when NetBeans changes them.
933
934
93510.3. Preparing NetBeans for Vim		*netbeans-preparation*
936
937In order for NetBeans to work with vim, the NetBeans External Editor module
938must be loaded and enabled.  If you have a Sun ONE Studio Enterprise Edition
939then this module should be loaded and enabled.  If you have a NetBeans release
940you may need to find another way of obtaining this open source module.
941
942You can check if you have this module by opening the Tools->Options dialog
943and drilling down to the "Modules" list (IDE Configuration->System->Modules).
944If your Modules list has an entry for "External Editor" you must make sure
945it is enabled (the "Enabled" property should have the value "True").  If your
946Modules list has no External Editor see the next section on |obtaining-exted|.
947
948
94910.4. Obtaining the External Editor Module	*obtaining-exted*
950
951There are 2 ways of obtaining the External Editor module.  The easiest way
952is to use the NetBeans Update Center to download and install the module.
953Unfortunately, some versions do not have this module in their update
954center.  If you cannot download via the update center you will need to
955download sources and build the module.  I will try and get the module
956available from the NetBeans Update Center so building will be unnecessary.
957Also check http://externaleditor.netbeans.org for other availability options.
958
959To download the External Editor sources via CVS and build your own module,
960see http://externaleditor.netbeans.org and http://www.netbeans.org.
961Unfortunately, this is not a trivial procedure.
962
963
96410.5. Setting up NetBeans to run with Vim	*netbeans-setup*
965
966Assuming you have loaded and enabled the NetBeans External Editor module
967as described in |netbeans-preparation| all you need to do is verify that
968the gvim command line is properly configured for your environment.
969
970Open the Tools->Options dialog and open the Editing category.  Select the
971External Editor.  The right hand pane should contain a Properties tab and
972an Expert tab.  In the Properties tab make sure the "Editor Type" is set
973to "Vim".  In the Expert tab make sure the "Vim Command" is correct.
974
975You should be careful if you change the "Vim Command".  There are command
976line options there which must be there for the connection to be properly
977set up.  You can change the command name but that's about it.  If your gvim
978can be found by your $PATH then the VIM Command can start with "gvim".  If
979you don't want gvim searched from your $PATH then hard code in the full
980Unix path name.  At this point you should get a gvim for any source file
981you open in NetBeans.
982
983If some files come up in gvim and others (with different file suffixes) come
984up in the default NetBeans editor you should verify the MIME type in the
985Expert tab MIME Type property.  NetBeans is MIME oriented and the External
986Editor will only open MIME types specified in this property.
987
988
989 vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl:
990