 Again, this is a series, and today we're adding on just a little bit more to what we've learned in the previous two weeks, which is opening up multiple files in Vim at once, and we're trying to make it easier by adding, you know, better tab completion. And we've been working on this for a couple of weeks, and today we're going to add just a little bit more to that. And this is going to set the wildcard menu option. So again, if I tree out here, you can see how my file structure is set up. If I have an index HTML, we have a JS folder, which has three JavaScript files in it, as well as a sub folder, which has a sub folder, which has another JavaScript file in it. Last week, we set our path variable to check all our files in the current directory and below. Let's go ahead and look at how that works again. So I'm going to say Vim, and I'm just going to go into my index file. So again, let's say imagine you're working on an HTML file here, and you want to open up a JavaScript file that you're working with within this HTML. Well, we can hit call and find. And then I can type in, in our case, I can type in like main.js. And because we added our asterisk to our path variable last week, it will find that main.js file, even though it's three directories down, right? So and if I type in colon LS, again, a list, I'm just reviewing a little bit here, the files that I have open, I can call colon B, and I can choose the index that HTML, I can tab complete that. So but we can also do find and let's say, oh yeah, it's inside the JS folder, I don't remember what it's called, I can type in JS forward slash, and I can start hitting tab and it will go through all the different files within that folder file, which is a sub folder, linux.js, site.js, and test.js are the three JS files. And that's great. But I want to make it look a little bit nicer. I want to be able to see all those files at once without having to tab through each one going, which one is it, and then going past it. So the way we're going to do that is we're going to set the wild card option. So we're going to say colon set wild card. Now I'm sorry not wild card set wild menu. Now that that is set. Now if I go colon find JS forward slash, and I start hitting tab, you can see it lists all the files for me, and I can use tab or my arrow keys to go through them. So it just makes it a little bit nicer visually, seeing what those files are. So now we can now add that, again, to our VimRC file and make that automatic. Because again, if we were to quit out of this and go back in and again, type find JS forward slash and start hitting tab, we don't have that feature, because any function we run down here is only for that session, unless we add it to our VimRC menu. So let's go ahead and add it to our VimRC file, which again is in your home directory, which is what the still day means, dot VimRC. The dot means it's a hidden file. And this is just a script that runs every time you start Vim, and it will run all the functions that you put in here. And this is what we've created so far in the previous tutorials. Again, if you haven't watched the previous videos, again, I suggest watching them. Hopefully there's a link to the playlist in the video description. And today we're going to add the set wild menu. We will save that. And now if I go back into our index file or any file that I'm working on, we now have that option that when we tab complete, it lists out the files like so, makes it very easy to select a file to open, which that was an empty file. So that's a bad example. Oops, JS, and we'll choose the test JS. So that is it. I thank you again for watching. As always, please visit my website, filmsbychrist.com. That's Chris of the K. There's a link in the description if you like my videos and watch them regularly. Think about becoming a supporter. You can do that two main ways financially anyway. You can go to patreon.com forward slash my Lex 1000 become a monthly supporter there for as well as a dollar a month. I do appreciate it. If you want to do a one time support, you can go ahead and use my PayPal link again at filmsbychrist.com. And if you can't support me financially, be sure to like, share, subscribe and comment. Especially if you like this series, let me know by liking this video and commenting and letting me know. As always, I thank you for watching and I really do hope that you have.