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  1. Introduction
  2. Installation
    2.1. Requirements
    2.2. Installing syntastic with Pathogen
  3. Recommended settings
  4. FAQ
    4.1. I installed syntastic but it isn't reporting any errors...
    4.2. Syntastic supports several checkers for my filetype, how do I tell it which one(s) to use?
    4.3. How can I run checkers for "foreign" filetypes against the current file?
    4.4. I have enabled multiple checkers for the current filetype. How can I display all errors from all checkers together?
    4.5. How can I pass additional arguments to a checker?
    4.6. I run a checker and the location list is not updated...
    4.6. I run:lopen or :lwindow and the error window is empty...
    4.7. How can I jump between the different errors without using the location list at the bottom of the window?
    4.8. The error window is closed automatically when I :quit the current buffer but not when I :bdelete it?
    4.9. My favourite checker needs to load a configuration file from the project's root rather than the current directory...
    4.10. What is the difference between syntax checkers and style checkers?
    4.11. How can I check scripts written for different versions of Python?
    4.12. How can I check scripts written for different versions of Ruby?
    4.13. The perl checker has stopped working...
    4.14. What happened to the rustc checker?
    4.15. What happened to the tsc checker?
    4.16. What happened to the xcrun checker?
  5. Resources

1. Introduction

Syntastic is a syntax checking plugin for Vim created by Martin Grenfell. It runs files through external syntax checkers and displays any resulting errors to the user. This can be done on demand, or automatically as files are saved. If syntax errors are detected, the user is notified and is happy because they didn't have to compile their code or execute their script to find them.

At the time of this writing, syntastic has checking plugins for ACPI Source Language, ActionScript, Ada, Ansible configurations, API Blueprint, AppleScript, AsciiDoc, Assembly languages, BEMHTML, Bro, Bourne shell, C, C++, C#, Cabal, Chef, CMake, CoffeeScript, Coco, Coq, CSS, Cucumber, CUDA, D, Dart, DocBook, Dockerfile, Dust, Elixir, Erlang, eRuby, Fortran, Gentoo metadata, GLSL, Go, Haml, Haskell, Haxe, Handlebars, HSS, HTML, Java, JavaScript, JSON, JSX, Julia, LESS, Lex, Limbo, LISP, LLVM intermediate language, Lua, Markdown, MATLAB, Mercury, NASM, Nix, Objective-C, Objective-C++, OCaml, Perl, Perl 6, Perl POD, PHP, gettext Portable Object, OS X and iOS property lists, Pug (formerly Jade), Puppet, Python, QML, R, Racket, RDF TriG, RDF Turtle, Relax NG, reStructuredText, RPM spec, Ruby, SASS/SCSS, Scala, Slim, SML, Solidity, Sphinx, SQL, Stylus, Tcl, TeX, Texinfo, Twig, TypeScript, Vala, Verilog, VHDL, Vim help, VimL, Vue.js, xHtml, XML, XSLT, XQuery, YACC, YAML, YANG data models, YARA rules, z80, Zope page templates, and Zsh. See the manual for details about the corresponding supported checkers (:help syntastic-checkers in Vim).

A number of third-party Vim plugins also provide checkers for syntastic, for example: merlin, omnisharp-vim, rust.vim, syntastic-extras, syntastic-more, tsuquyomi, vim-crystal, vim-eastwood, and vim-swift.

Below is a screenshot showing the methods that Syntastic uses to display syntax errors. Note that, in practise, you will only have a subset of these methods enabled.

Screenshot 1

  1. Errors are loaded into the location list for the corresponding window.
  2. When the cursor is on a line containing an error, the error message is echoed in the command window.
  3. Signs are placed beside lines with errors - note that warnings are displayed in a different color.
  4. There is a configurable statusline flag you can include in your statusline config.
  5. Hover the mouse over a line containing an error and the error message is displayed as a balloon.
  6. (not shown) Highlighting errors with syntax highlighting. Erroneous parts of lines can be highlighted.

2. Installation

2.1. Requirements

Syntastic itself has rather relaxed requirements: it doesn't have any external dependencies, and it needs a version of Vim compiled with a few common features: autocmd, eval, file_in_path, modify_fname, quickfix, reltime, statusline, and user_commands. Not all possible combinations of features that include the ones above make equal sense on all operating systems, but Vim version 7 or later with the "normal", "big", or "huge" feature sets should be fine.

Syntastic should work with any modern plugin managers for Vim, such as NeoBundle, Pathogen, Vim-Addon-Manager, Vim-Plug, or Vundle. Instructions for installing syntastic with Pathogen are included below for completeness.

Starting with Vim version 7.4.1486 you can also load syntastic using the standard mechanism of packages, without the help of third-party plugin managers (see :help packages in Vim for details). Beware however that, while support for packages has been added in Vim 7.4.1384, the functionality needed by syntastic is present only in versions 7.4.1486 and later.

Last but not least: syntastic doesn't know how to do any syntax checks by itself. In order to get meaningful results you need to install external checkers corresponding to the types of files you use. Please consult the manual (:help syntastic-checkers in Vim) for a list of supported checkers.

2.2. Installing syntastic with Pathogen

If you already have Pathogen working then skip Step 1 and go to Step 2.

2.2.1. Step 1: Install pathogen.vim

First I'll show you how to install Tim Pope's Pathogen so that it's easy to install syntastic. Do this in your terminal so that you get the pathogen.vim file and the directories it needs:

mkdir -p ~/.vim/autoload ~/.vim/bundle && \
curl -LSso ~/.vim/autoload/pathogen.vim https://tpo.pe/pathogen.vim

Next you need to add this to your ~/.vimrc:

execute pathogen#infect()

2.2.2. Step 2: Install syntastic as a Pathogen bundle

You now have pathogen installed and can put syntastic into ~/.vim/bundle like this:

cd ~/.vim/bundle && \
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/vim-syntastic/syntastic.git

Quit vim and start it back up to reload it, then type:

:Helptags

If you get an error when you do this, then you probably didn't install Pathogen right. Go back to Step 1 and make sure you did the following:

  1. Created both the ~/.vim/autoload and ~/.vim/bundle directories.
  2. Added the execute pathogen#infect() line to your ~/.vimrc file
  3. Did the git clone of syntastic inside ~/.vim/bundle
  4. Have permissions to access all of these directories.

3. Recommended settings

Syntastic has numerous options that can be configured, and the defaults are not particularly well suitable for new users. It is recommended that you start by adding the following lines to your vimrc file, and return to them after reading the manual (see :help syntastic in Vim):

set statusline+=%#warningmsg#
set statusline+=%{SyntasticStatuslineFlag()}
set statusline+=%*

let g:syntastic_always_populate_loc_list = 1
let g:syntastic_auto_loc_list = 1
let g:syntastic_check_on_open = 1
let g:syntastic_check_on_wq = 0

4. FAQ

4.1. Q. I installed syntastic but it isn't reporting any errors...

A. The most likely reason is that none of the syntax checkers that it requires are installed. For example: by default, python requires either flake8 or pylint to be installed and in your $PATH. Read the manual (:help syntastic-checkers in Vim) to find out what executables are supported. Note that aliases do not work; the actual executables must be available in your $PATH. Symbolic links are okay though. You can see syntastic's idea of available checkers by running :SyntasticInfo.

A second probable reason is that none of the available checkers are enabled. Syntastic comes preconfigured with a default list of enabled checkers per filetype, but this list is kept short in order to prevent slowing down Vim or trying to run conflicting checks. The command :SyntasticInfo will show you which checkers are enabled. You can tell syntastic which checkers (among the available ones) you want to run by setting g:syntastic_<filetype>_checkers in your vimrc (see below).

A third possible reason is that the $PATH seen by syntastic might not be same as the $PATH in your login shell. Syntastic runs checkers using the shell pointed to by Vim's shell (or by g:syntastic_shell, if set), and that's the shell you need to configure to set the proper $PATH and environment variables for your checkers. You can see syntastic's idea of $PATH by running

:echo syntastic#util#system('echo "$PATH"')

on UNIX and Mac OS-X systems, or

:echo syntastic#util#system('echo %PATH%')

on Windows.

Finally, another reason it could fail is that either the command line options or the error output for a syntax checker may have changed. In this case, make sure you have the latest version of the syntax checker installed. If it still fails then post an issue - or better yet, create a pull request.

4.2. Q. Syntastic supports several checkers for my filetype, how do I tell it which one(s) to use?

A. Add a line like this to your vimrc:

let g:syntastic_<filetype>_checkers = ['<checker-name>']

To see the list of supported checkers for your filetype read the manual (:help syntastic-checkers in Vim).

For example, Python has the following checkers, among others: flake8, pyflakes, pylint and a native python checker. To tell syntastic to use pylint, you would use this setting:

let g:syntastic_python_checkers = ['pylint']

Checkers can be chained together like this:

let g:syntastic_php_checkers = ['php', 'phpcs', 'phpmd']

This is telling syntastic to run the php checker first, and if no errors are found, run phpcs, and then phpmd.

You can also run checkers explicitly by calling :SyntasticCheck <checker>. For example to run phpcs and phpmd:

:SyntasticCheck phpcs phpmd

This works for any checkers available for the current filetype, even if they aren't listed in g:syntastic_<filetype>_checkers.

4.3. Q. How can I run checkers for "foreign" filetypes against the current file?

A. You need to qualify the name of the "foreign" checker with the name of its filetype. For example to check tex files with the checker language_check (which normally acts only on files of type text), you can add text/language_check to the list fo checkers for tex:

let g:syntastic_tex_checkers = ['lacheck', 'text/language_check']

This also works with :SyntasticCheck, e.g. the following command runs text/language_check against the current file regardless of the current filetype:

:SyntasticCheck text/language_check

Of course, the checkers specified this way need to be known to syntastic, and they need to be shown as available when you run :SyntasticInfo. You can't just make up a combination of a filetype and a program name and expect it to work as a checker.

4.4. Q. I have enabled multiple checkers for the current filetype. How can I display all errors from all checkers together?

A. Set g:syntastic_aggregate_errors to 1 in your vimrc:

let g:syntastic_aggregate_errors = 1

See :help syntastic-aggregating-errors for more details.

4.5. Q. How can I pass additional arguments to a checker?

A. In most cases a command line is constructed using an internal function named makeprgBuild(), which provides a number of options that allow you to customise every part of the command that gets run. You can set these options using global variables.

The general form of the global args variable is syntastic_<filetype>_<checker>_args. Thus if you wanted to pass --my --args --here to the Ruby mri checker you would add this line to your vimrc:

let g:syntastic_ruby_mri_args = "--my --args --here"

See :help syntastic-checker-options for more information.

A number of checkers don't use the makeprgBuild() function mentioned above, or have additional options that can be configured. For these checkers the exact list of options should be included in the manual (:help syntastic-checkers in Vim).

4.6. Q. I run a checker and the location list is not updated...
4.6. Q. I run:lopen or :lwindow and the error window is empty...

A. By default the location list is changed only when you run the :Errors command, in order to minimise conflicts with other plugins. If you want the location list to always be updated when you run the checkers, add this line to your vimrc:

let g:syntastic_always_populate_loc_list = 1

4.7. Q. How can I jump between the different errors without using the location list at the bottom of the window?

A. Vim provides several built-in commands for this. See :help :lnext and :help :lprevious.

If you use these commands a lot then you may want to add shortcut mappings to your vimrc, or install something like unimpaired, which provides such mappings (among other things).

4.8. Q. The error window is closed automatically when I :quit the current buffer but not when I :bdelete it?

A. There is no safe way to handle that situation automatically, but you can work around it:

nnoremap <silent> <C-d> :lclose<CR>:bdelete<CR>
cabbrev <silent> bd <C-r>=(getcmdtype()==#':' && getcmdpos()==1 ? 'lclose\|bdelete' : 'bd')<CR>

4.9. My favourite checker needs to load a configuration file from the project's root rather than the current directory...

A. You can set up an autocmd to search for the configuration file in the current directory and upwards, and add it to the checker's options when found. For example for jscs:

function! FindConfig(prefix, what, where)
    let cfg = findfile(a:what, escape(a:where, ' ') . ';')
    return cfg !=# '' ? ' ' . a:prefix . ' ' . shellescape(cfg) : ''
endfunction

autocmd FileType javascript let b:syntastic_javascript_jscs_args =
    \ get(g:, 'syntastic_javascript_jscs_args', '') .
    \ FindConfig('-c', '.jscsrc', expand('<afile>:p:h', 1))

4.10. Q. What is the difference between syntax checkers and style checkers?

A. The errors and warnings they produce are highlighted differently and can be filtered by different rules, but otherwise the distinction is pretty much arbitrary. There is an ongoing effort to keep things consistent, so you can generally expect messages produced by syntax checkers to be mostly related to syntax, and messages produced by style checkers to be mostly about style. But there can be no formal guarantee that, say, a style checker that runs into a syntax error wouldn't die with a fatal message, nor that a syntax checker wouldn't give you warnings against using some constructs as being bad practice. There is also no guarantee that messages marked as style are less severe than the ones marked as syntax (whatever that might mean). And there are even a few Frankenstein checkers (for example flake8 and pylama) that, by their nature, produce both kinds of messages. Syntastic is not smart enough to be able to sort out these things by itself.

Generally it's more useful to look at this from the perspective of filtering unwanted messages, rather than as an indicator of severity levels. The distinction between syntax and style is orthogonal to the distinction between errors and warnings, and thus you can turn off messages based on level, on type, or both.

e.g. To disable all style messages:

let g:syntastic_quiet_messages = { "type": "style" }

See :help syntastic_quiet_messages for more information.

4.11. Q. How can I check scripts written for different versions of Python?

A. Install a Python version manager such as virtualenv or pyenv, activate the environment for the relevant version of Python, and install in it the checkers you want to use. Set g:syntastic_python_checkers accordingly in your vimrc, and run Vim from the virtual environment.

If you're starting Vim from a desktop manager rather than from a terminal you might need to write wrapper scripts around your checkers, to activate the virtual environment before running the actual checks. Then you'll need to point the relevant g:syntastic_python_<checker>_exec variables to the wrapper scripts.

4.12. Q. How can I check scripts written for different versions of Ruby?

A. Install a Ruby version manager such as rvm or rbenv, activate the relevant version of Ruby, and install in it the checkers you want to use. Set g:syntastic_ruby_checkers accordingly in your vimrc, and run Vim under the relevant Ruby version.

If you're starting Vim from a desktop manager rather than from a terminal and depending on the version manager you use you might need to write wrapper scripts around your checkers, to activate the relevant version of Ruby before running the actual checks. Then you'll need to point the relevant g:syntastic_ruby_<checker>_exec variables to the wrapper scripts.

4.13. Q. The perl checker has stopped working...

A. The perl checker runs perl -c against your file, which in turn executes any BEGIN, UNITCHECK, and CHECK blocks, and any use statements in your file (cf. perlrun). This is probably fine if you wrote the file yourself, but it's a security problem if you're checking third-party files. Since there is currently no way to disable this behaviour while still producing useful results, the checker is now disabled by default. To (re-)enable it, make sure the g:syntastic_perl_checkers list includes perl, and set g:syntastic_enable_perl_checker to 1 in your vimrc:

let g:syntastic_enable_perl_checker = 1

4.14. Q. What happened to the rustc checker?

A. It is now part of the rust.vim plugin. If you install this plugin the checker should be picked up automatically by syntastic.

4.15. Q. What happened to the tsc checker?

A. It didn't meet people's expectations and it has been removed. The plugin tsuquyomi comes packaged with a checker for TypeScript. If you install this plugin the checker should be picked up automatically by syntastic.

4.16. Q. What happened to the xcrun checker?

A. The xcrun checker used to have a security problem and it has been removed. A better checker for Swift is part of the vim-swift plugin. If you install this plugin the checker should be picked up automatically by syntastic.

5. Resources

The preferred place for posting suggestions, reporting bugs, and general discussions related to syntastic is the issue tracker at GitHub. A guide for writing syntax checkers can be found in the wiki. There are also a dedicated google group, and a syntastic tag at StackOverflow.

Syntastic aims to provide a common interface to syntax checkers for as many languages as possible. For particular languages, there are, of course, other plugins that provide more functionality than syntastic. You might want to take a look at ghcmod-vim, jedi-vim, python-mode, vim-go, or YouCompleteMe.

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