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Normalize the chapter spelling
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# Ch23. Vim Runtime
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In the previous chapters, I mentioned that Vim automatically looks for special paths like `pack/` (Ch 22) and `compiler/` (Ch 19) inside the `~/.vim/` directory. These are examples of Vim runtime paths.
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In the previous chapters, I mentioned that Vim automatically looks for special paths like `pack/` (Ch. 22) and `compiler/` (Ch. 19) inside the `~/.vim/` directory. These are examples of Vim runtime paths.
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Vim has more runtime paths than these two. In this chapter, you will learn a high-level overview of these runtime paths. The goal of this chapter is to show you when they are called. Knowing this will allow you to understand and customize Vim further.
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@ -730,7 +730,7 @@ Vim has special primitives:
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- `v:none`
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- `v:null`
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By the way, `v:` is Vim's built-in variable. They will be covered more in Ch 26.
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By the way, `v:` is Vim's built-in variable. They will be covered more in a later chapter.
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In my experience, you won't use these special primitives often. If you need a truthy / falsy value, you can just use 0 (falsy) and non-0 (truthy). If you need an empty string, just use `""`. But it is still good to know, so let's quickly go over them.
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