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mirror of https://github.com/jbranchaud/til synced 2026-01-03 07:08:01 +00:00

Add Detect If You Are On A Mac as a vim til

This commit is contained in:
jbranchaud
2017-08-13 11:51:31 -05:00
parent 3eeb5f14cd
commit f9eba7da3f
2 changed files with 26 additions and 1 deletions

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@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ smart people at [Hashrocket](http://hashrocket.com/).
For a steady stream of TILs from a variety of rocketeers, checkout
[til.hashrocket.com](https://til.hashrocket.com/).
_548 TILs and counting..._
_549 TILs and counting..._
---
@@ -561,6 +561,7 @@ _548 TILs and counting..._
- [Delete To The End Of The Line](vim/delete-to-the-end-of-the-line.md)
- [Deleting Buffers In BufExplorer](vim/deleting-buffers-in-bufexplorer.md)
- [Deleting Directories Of Files From netrw](vim/deleting-directories-of-files-from-netrw.md)
- [Detect If You Are On A Mac](vim/detect-if-you-are-on-a-mac.md)
- [Difference Between :wq and :x](vim/difference-between-wq-and-x.md)
- [Display Word Count Stats](vim/display-word-count-stats.md)
- [Edges Of The Selection](vim/edges-of-the-selection.md)

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# Detect If You Are On A Mac
There are a couple ways of detecting with vimscript if you are on a mac.
This can be useful if you are writing a plugin with OS-specific
functionality. Here are two ways to make that check.
```vimscript
if has('macunix') || has('mac') || has('osx')
...
endif
```
Alternatively, you can use Vim's `system()` function to execute unix's
`uname` command. This command will give you the name of the operating
system. In the event you are using a Mac, the result of `uname` should be
`Darwin`. The following regex match is a good way to make this check.
```vimscript
if system('uname') =~ "Darwin"
...
endif
```
See `:h has()`, `:h system()`, and `man uname` for more details.