
I've given up on getting a decent text editor for editing Haskell
(specifically literate Haskell -- plain Haskell works fine in GEDIT).
Instead I fire up VIM and get ... a total mess. At first I think maybe
I've screwed up a whole bunch of settings or something, so I nuke
everything in my home directory that begins with .vim and then, for
added measure, head over to /usr/share and nuke the entire ./vim
directory tree. I then reinstall vim (from the Ubuntu Edgy archives) to
get a brand new set of config files unsullied by my hands.
I still get a dog's breakfast.
A screen shot of what I'm seeing with a representative example of a .lhs
file to show what I mean can be found at
http://img357.imageshack.us/img357/5798/gvimexamplezv4.png. (I've pared
it down to the minimum I could find that shows the behaviour clearly.)
The problems I'm seeing are the ugly white-on-red for underlines, the
lack of any kind of differentiation for keywords/operators/etc. vs.
identifiers (although some punctuation is recognized, specifically curly
braces), comments not being noted, etc. Basically it looks like the
Haskell is simply not being recognized at all (and, if the @saBinds@
thing is what I think it is, it looks like some latex isn't being
recognized fully either).
Can anybody vim-centric please take a look at this and give me a few
educated guesses as to what is happening here? For good measure, here's
the beginning of the lhaskell.vim file that comes with my vim
distribution (7.0 in the Ubuntu archives). If it's desired I can attach
the whole file. (It isn't actually all that large.)
" Vim syntax file
" Language: Haskell with literate comments, Bird style,
" TeX style and plain text surrounding
" \begin{code} \end{code} blocks
" Maintainer: Haskell Cafe mailinglist