In my .vimrc, how can I check for the existence of a color scheme?

ClosureCowboy picture ClosureCowboy · Apr 18, 2011 · Viewed 11.3k times · Source

In a .vimrc, is it possible to load a color scheme only if it exists?

Answer

Luc Hermitte picture Luc Hermitte · Apr 18, 2011

Using :colorscheme in a try-catch as Randy has done may be enough if you just want to load it if it exists and do something else otherwise. If you are not interested in the else part, a simple :silent! colorscheme is enough.

Otherwise, globpath() is the way to go. You may, then, check each path returned with filereadable() if you really wish to.

" {rtp}/autoload/has.vim
function! has#colorscheme(name) abort
    let pat = 'colors/'.a:name.'.vim'
    return !empty(globpath(&rtp, pat))
endfunction

" .vimrc
if has#colorscheme('desert')
     ...

EDIT: filereadable($HOME.'/.vim/colors/'.name.'.vim') may seem simple and it's definitively attractive, but this is not enough if the colorscheme we're looking for is elsewhere. Typically if it has been installed in another directory thanks to a plugin manager. In that case the only reliable way is to check in the vim 'runtimepath' (a.k.a. 'rtp'). Hence globpath(). Note that :colorscheme name command searches in {rtp}/colors/{name}.vim.